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Posted on 07/12/2004 12:45:33 PM PDT by RavenMoon
WASHINGTON - Lynne Cheney, the vice president's wife, said yesterday that states should have the final say over the legal status of personal relationships. The Cheneys have a lesbian daughter.
That stand puts her at odds with the vice president on the need for the constitutional amendment now debated in the Senate that effectively would ban gay marriage.
"I think that the constitutional amendment discussion will give us an opportunity to look for ways to discuss ways in which we can keep the authority of the states intact," Cheney told CNN's Late Edition.
The Senate began debate Friday on an amendment that defines marriage as a union of a man and woman as husband and wife.
(Excerpt) Read more at baltimoresun.com ...
If we leave it to the states, we should allow the states to not recognize the marriage liscenses issued in other states. As the constitution is written today, each state must recognize all official documents issued by the courts of other states.
Let the ammendment say that no marriage liscense is to be issued by a state court.
Ew. Eating bile. Ew!
I'm not impugning the entire state of Utah. But if the left is going to argue that 4 justices in Massachusetts can decide this issue for the entire state under the guise of "states' rights," then I think it is a fair question to ask them if they think polygamy should be legal in Utah since some of their citizens want to live that lifestyle. Utah had legal polygamy when they wanted to join the Union. They were federally forced to ban it. The current crowd espousing states' rights must think that was an atrocity or be completely ideologically inconsistent.BTW, I believe the first Republican platform wanted to bring to an end the sins of polygamy and slavery.
"that states should have the final say over the legal status of personal relationships. "
But that isn't what is happening currently. The legalization of gay marriage in one state would have the effect of legalizing it in every state.
Gay couples will get married in say Mass., then move to another state (say Montana). Montana would then be forced to recognize the gay marriage due to the full faith and credit law in the constitution.
Gay couples can't get married in every state, but their marriages must be recognized by every state. Essentially stripping each state of the ability to decide this issue for themselves.
The point of my earlier reply is that both V.P. and Mrs. Cheney have a valid point.
I am no scholar of Abraham Lincoln, but Jay Nordlinger's Impromptus column today has glowing reviews of a biography about the great man. He mentions slavery, but not polygamy. I am more familiar with Samuel Clemens satire about polygamy in the late 19th century.
Exact same position as her husband four years ago.
You said:
"Personally, I have no problem with gay marriage but then I'm obviously biased. I'd rather see that than promiscuity, to be honest, and men in general, gay or straight, seem to have such a propensity to towards that."
Right, once moral absolutes are rejected and sex becomes an orgiastic free for all, with abandoned children, deserted wives, cuckolded husbands, people deciding they are "gay" after years of marriage and children, sexual predators looking for young victims to rape or seduce [keep in mind that roughly one third of all child molestation is same sex], countless promiscuous homosexuals having anonymous sex in public establishments - yes, I would say that issues relating to sex have become VERY complex.
It's important to note that the promiscuity rates for homosexuals are drastically, wildly higher than those for heterosexual people. They can't even be compared. The reason homosexual activists want "gay" marriage has zero, nothing to do with the desire to promote monogamy. How do I know? I accept what these homosexual spokespeople say about it:
From LA Times of March 12, 2004...
"Divided over gay marriage"
Paula Ettelbrick, a law professor who runs the International Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission, recommends legalizing a wide variety of marriage alternatives, including polyamory, or group wedlock. An example could include a lesbian couple living with a sperm-donor father, or a network of men and women who share sexual relations.
One aim, she says, is to break the stranglehold that married heterosexual couples have on health benefits and legal rights. The other goal is to "push the parameters of sex, sexuality and family, and in the process transform the very fabric of society." ... [snip]
An excerpt from: In Their Own Words: The Homosexual Agenda:
"Homosexual activist Michelangelo Signorile, who writes periodically for The New York Times, summarizes the agenda in OUT magazine (Dec/Jan 1994):
"A middle ground might be to fight for same-sex marriage and its benefits and then, once granted, redefine the institution of marriage completely, to demand the right to marry not as a way of adhering to society's moral codes, but rather to debunk a myth and radically alter an archaic institution... The most subversive action lesbian and gay men can undertake --and one that would perhaps benefit all of society--is to transform the notion of family entirely."
"Its the final tool with which to dismantle all sodomy statues, get education about homosexuality and AIDS into the public schools and in short to usher in a sea change in how society views and treats us."
Chris Crain, the editor of the Washington Blade has stated that all homosexual activists should fight for the legalization of same-sex marriage as a way of gaining passage of federal anti-discrimination laws that will provide homosexuals with federal protection for their chosen lifestyle.
Crain writes: "...any leader of any gay rights organization who is not prepared to throw the bulk of their efforts right now into the fight for marriage is squandering resources and doesn't deserve the position." (Washington Blade, August, 2003).
Andrew Sullivan, a homosexual activist writing in his book, Virtually Normal, says that once same-sex marriage is legalized, heterosexuals will have to develop a greater "understanding of the need for extramarital outlets between two men than between a man and a woman." He notes: "The truth is, homosexuals are not entirely normal; and to flatten their varied and complicated lives into a single, moralistic model is to miss what is essential and exhilarating about their otherness." (Sullivan, Virtually Normal, pp. 202-203)
Paula Ettelbrick, a law professor and homosexual activist has said: "Being queer is more than setting up house, sleeping with a person of the same gender, and seeking state approval for doing so. . Being queer means pushing the parameters of sex, sexuality, and family; and in the process, transforming the very fabric of society. . We must keep our eyes on the goals of providing true alternatives to marriage and of radically reordering society's view of reality." (partially quoted in "Beyond Gay Marriage," Stanley Kurtz, The Weekly Standard, August 4, 2003)
Evan Wolfson has stated: "Isn't having the law pretend that there is only one family model that works (let alone exists) a lie? . marriage is not just about procreation-indeed is not necessarily about procreation at all. "(quoted in "What Marriage Is For," by Maggie Gallagher, The Weekly Standard, August 11, 2003)
Mitchel Raphael, editor of the Canadian homosexual magazine Fab, says: "Ambiguity is a good word for the feeling among gays about marriage. I'd be for marriage if I thought gay people would challenge and change the institution and not buy into the traditional meaning of 'till death do us part' and monogamy forever. We should be Oscar Wildes and not like everyone else watching the play." (quoted in "Now Free To Marry, Canada's Gays Say, 'Do I?'" by Clifford Krauss, The New York Times, August 31, 2003)
1972 Gay Rights Platform Demands: "Repeal of all legislative provisions that restrict the sex or number of persons entering into a marriage unit." [Also among the demands was the elimination of all age of consent laws.]
I think a lot of Republicans are not anti-gay personally (love the sinner, hate the sin). I also think I don't want people tinkering with the Constitution! I just don't see why the state needs to get involved with marriage period, it should be for religions to decide. The state should give everyone a civil union, and then each church could give or deny a religious ceremony as they please. Otherwise it just focuses people's attention to this one, relatively minor social issue, instead of larger issues of national security, budget, etc.
I agree, it would be much easier all around if we could gin up support to dump rogue judges.
I was pretty disgusted too.
Abraham Lincoln signed the first anti-polygamy law in, I think, 1862.
Social conservatives agree on traditional moral absolutes, which are essentially the same throughout the history of civilized human society. What has been considered virtuous and moral in sexual behavior have been amazingly consistent throughout history, and every monotheist religion as well as many that aren't such as Buddhism all share the same values. None have accepted same sex acts as anything other than unnatural and immoral.
Here's a statement by John Adams about virtue:
"We ought to consider what is the end of government before we determine which is the best form. Upon this point all speculative politicians will agree that the happiness of society is the end of government, as all divines and moral philosophers will agree that the happiness of the individual is the end of man. ... All sober inquirers after truth, ancient and modern, pagan and Christian, have declared that the happiness of man, as well as his dignity,
consists in virtue." --John Adams
Now that's conservatism in a nutshell. It's not just the RTKBA, or lower taxes, that is the foundation of conservatism. It's that social stability and progress has to be founded on public virtue. Many of the founders expressed that very explicitly.
Conservative pro sodomites....State's rights.....Activist Judges.....
Woe unto those who call good...evil and evil....good.....
America R.I.P indeed
imo
That's nonsense. If Montana doesn't issue (for example) drivers licenses to anyone under 25, then no one under 25 drives, and that includes anyone under 25 from another state who moves there with a valid license from the other state. The license from the other state is useless in Montana. A license for any imagined activity, illegal in Montana, legal elsewhere, isn't going to hold any weight in Montana. The full faith and credit clause was never intended to force a state to permit illegal behavior just because that behavior is legal in some other state.
This whole idea of preemptively amending the Constitution is hysterical madness. The federal courts are going to decide this matter before this stupid amendment ever gets passed anyway. Sheez, the things people worry about.
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