Responsible? No need for you to be married, then. (Page 2)
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![]() | ![]() ChrisM - 1. Ok, totally non substantive question, but I have to ask Don why you choose to set up your posts with that return, unless your typing on some weird machine... is teh rhythm intentional? 2. I am not sure one can say that "marriage" is a "protected class" under the Constitution. Religion, race, sexual preference, etc., are all characteristics (for lack of a better term) that are protected. Marriage is a relationship, not a characteristic. Apples and oranges, I think. You'd have to be talking about the "characteristic" of being married, which begs the question whether one is married to one of the opposite sex or same sex. Dollars to donuts you cannot find a citation to any Constitutional law saying the class of those married to one of the opposite sex is a protected class for 14th amendment jurisprudence. ETA - actually sounds to me like he might be setting up the defensive argument that gays are not a protected class, not the opposite Chris 1. It's easier for me to read. I don't like it when there are posts that scroll to the end of an area in a site, any site, and have no visual break in them to help with reading. Plus with many sites the width varies by screen size, browser, user settings. So this is a way to control the look of the type. I write my emails this way too. It also helps me keep my thoughts gathered into groups, much like using paragraphs. So I think of it as maybe a new type of paragraph for online text. It helps me to write more clearly. Do you not like it? 2. Your ETA may in fact be correct. Paul Clement is a brilliant guy.
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Pro ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() At first I thought that had to be on the Onion. That is the most confusing and laughable argument possible. So it's better to be married and have unwanted children than be a gay couple and show how badly you want a child by going through the adoption process. This is really how House Republicans think? Nothing more pressing to do than harass other Americans? Edited by BrianRunsPhilly 2013-01-28 6:16 PM |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() That is one of the stupidest things I have ever read. |
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Elite ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2013-01-28 4:54 PM Paul Clement is a brilliant guy.
He may be, but his argument is laughable. Same sex couples also use pregnancy methods that produce multiple offspring... is that planed for to have twins? All the arguments of offspring always come back to the same point... infertile and post-menopausal couples are not "married" and deserve no protection or benefits because they can't have planned or unplanned pregnancies. There is absolutely not one single logical or legal argument to keep same sex couples from being married... not with adoption, artificial fertility procedures, common law marriages when people shack up long enough, drive through marriage windows in Vegas, and divorce rates and unwed pregnancies being what they are today. Now if there was a law to do away with all that stuff, or you just don't like gay marriage, or you are opposed to it from some religious reasons... fine. But don't tell me "traditional" marriage is some how threatened and then try to dream up some legal argument to protect it like the one posted here... laughable. Edited by powerman 2013-01-28 6:33 PM |
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![]() | ![]() powerman - But don't tell me "traditional" marriage is some how threatened and then try to dream up some legal argument to protect it like the one posted here... laughable. I'm not going to. I've done that plenty times in the past. My contribution to this thread is merely to point out If you think Clement's argument is laughable, that's fine. We'll see what happens if and when he gets to argue it before the SCOTUS. I'm sure the headline for this story will make great fodder for the likes This argument has been building for years; there is a procreative aspect That we've gotten so far from that common sense understanding of marriage |
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Sneaky Slow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2013-01-28 7:44 PM If you think Clement's argument is laughable, that's fine. We'll see what happens if and when he gets to argue it before the SCOTUS. Hopefully, what will happen before the SCOTUS is the same thing that happened in the two most recent high-profile cases Clement argued before the Court, defending Arizona's immigration law and trying to get the Affordable Care Act overturned... he loses. Sure, he's a great lawyer, but that means precious little when the argument is unsound. |
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![]() | ![]() tealeaf - Hopefully, what will happen before the SCOTUS is the same thing that happened in the two most recent high-profile cases Clement argued before the Court, defending Arizona's immigration law and trying to get the Affordable Care Act overturned... he loses. Sure, he's a great lawyer, but that means precious little when the argument is unsound. You're correct, if indeed the argument is unsound. Regarding the ACA, what no one saw coming was |
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Elite ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2013-01-28 5:44 PM powerman - But don't tell me "traditional" marriage is some how threatened and then try to dream up some legal argument to protect it like the one posted here... laughable. I'm not going to. I've done that plenty times in the past. My contribution to this thread is merely to point out If you think Clement's argument is laughable, that's fine. We'll see what happens if and when he gets to argue it before the SCOTUS. I'm sure the headline for this story will make great fodder for the likes This argument has been building for years; there is a procreative aspect That we've gotten so far from that common sense understanding of marriage That's fair... and me calling someone of his legal standing laughable, is well... laughable. It may well be a argument with legal standing... but the sniff test alone does not pass. And most legal cases are not decided by the most far fetched defense one can come up with. Most bemoan the "insanity" plea... but is is rarely successful if ever... and when it is... well the offender is actually insane. Just because a lawyer argues it, does not make it so. The fact of the matter is that "marriage" is not some thing sitting in a law book. Marriage is what ever it "is" by those that practice it. I understand there are those that want to think of it in some never changing traditional definition, but I would argue that a large part of "practitioners" are way out of bounds to those "traditional" definitions... the vast majority of which entered into the institution by living in sin first. By traditional definitions, what percentage of those that have been married today, were virgins until marriage, and never divorced since, raising a nuclear family with traditionally defined roles for mother and father? |
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![]() | ![]() powerman - By traditional definitions, what percentage of those that have been married today, were virgins until marriage, and never divorced since, raising a nuclear family with traditionally defined roles for mother and father? No many. The attack and take down of the institution of marriage We're witnessing the bitter fruits of that with all that is going on these days in so many areas. |
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Extreme Veteran ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() When we went to get our marriage license the woman at the counter called over others to look at it and they debated the last time they had seen an application like it. The weird feature- both of our parents were still married and lived in the towns we were born in. They were debating if they had seen one in past year or not. That said DH and I had the same address at the time of application ![]() |
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Elite ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2013-01-28 7:06 PM powerman - By traditional definitions, what percentage of those that have been married today, were virgins until marriage, and never divorced since, raising a nuclear family with traditionally defined roles for mother and father? No many. The attack and take down of the institution of marriage We're witnessing the bitter fruits of that with all that is going on these days in so many areas. And that is surely a discussion for another thread. Obviously not everyone will agree all the "changes" are for the better. I do not think this should be a race to see who can reach the "bottom" first and still be called married.... but I would argue that many of the changes that would not fit traditional definitions are also loving, caring, respectful, relationships that most certainly abide by those spiritual principles we hold dear. The degree to which it is "changed" and one still considers "healthy" is open for debate. All I know is that I can't control what others do, and I have yet to meet a God that could either. My best hope is to live my life how I deem appropriate, how my heart guides me, and give others the respect to do the same. |
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Member ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() dontracy - 2013-01-28 6:44 PM powerman - But don't tell me "traditional" marriage is some how threatened and then try to dream up some legal argument to protect it like the one posted here... laughable. I'm not going to. I've done that plenty times in the past. My contribution to this thread is merely to point out If you think Clement's argument is laughable, that's fine. We'll see what happens if and when he gets to argue it before the SCOTUS. I'm sure the headline for this story will make great fodder for the likes This argument has been building for years; there is a procreative aspect That we've gotten so far from that common sense understanding of marriage
I thought the 14th Amendment had an equal protection clause, i.e. "No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Doesn't that mean they can't create laws for separate classes, even if they prove Male-Female marriage is a separate class from male-male and female-female marriages? |
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Veteran ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Deleted post. I just don't feel like getting into it today... Best, Frank Edited by Frank in St. Louis 2013-01-29 9:40 AM |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Moonrocket - 2013-01-28 9:22 PM When we went to get our marriage license the woman at the counter called over others to look at it and they debated the last time they had seen an application like it. The weird feature- both of our parents were still married and lived in the towns we were born in. They were debating if they had seen one in past year or not. That said DH and I had the same address at the time of application ![]() 20 years ago when we went for ours, the Co. Reg of Deeds had a helluva hard time with me! "Last name; Bernstein, Father's name; Bertin, Mother's name; Naftali... When did you change your name and why?" They had this look like they had never seen such a strange, gazpacho, family before.
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() blueyedbikergirl - 2013-01-28 5:02 PM I hope you don't mind, but I'm probably going to steal this because it's awesome.
Oh feel free to! I stole it myself. Can't even remember where I first saw it, but I've held on to it for some time now. Funny stuff!
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