It's like I said before, in lieu of providing proof of their arguments in court cases (such as the recent marriage equality victories in Pennsylvania and Oregon), anti-gay organization leaders such as Family Research Council president Tony Perkins are whining about "activists judges."
What I didn't count on is how folks like Perkins would take the visage of dotty old men shaking their fists at the sun while talking about open rebellion against the courts:
For the life of me, I cannot understand why is Perkins raising so much hell after the fact. What would be so difficult for him or someone like fellow FRC spokesman Peter Sprigg to testify as to the validity of these laws during the trials? What's the point of whining after the fact if these so-called defenders of marriage pulled disappearing tricks when the validity of these laws were being decided?
We all know the answer to that question. Neither Perkins nor Sprigg, nor any other anti-gay talking head blanketing the airwaves whining about "activist judges" or the "will of the people" will volunteer to testify because they KNOW the laws aren't valid. Of course no one interviewing Perkins and company ever seems to have the desire to pin them down on that point.
How convenient.
Also, I am a bit disturbed by Perkins' assertion that the country will start discarding court decisions they don't like. Mr. Perkins should be aware that this sort of thing is not what America is about. The legislators make the laws, sometimes the people vote on the laws, but at all times, the courts decide whether or not the laws are constitutionally valid.
And if they decide that the laws aren't constitutionally valid, then that means no more law. We no longer live in the era in which presidents, such as Andrew Jackson, ignored court rulings while daring them to enforce said rulings. I would like to think that some of us in this country have outgrown that sort of immaturity.
Lastly, and I think I speak for the vast majority of lgbts, I don't care whether or not Mr. Perkins accepts marriage equality. No one is asking him to participate in gay marriage. No one is asking him to accept marriage equality. When he implies things like "we will not accept gay marriage," he would do well to remember that he doesn't speak for the entire country. No one elected him as president or spokesman (hell, I wouldn't elect him as dogcatcher). He dictates no policy, he creates no legislation. He is simply a charlatan in charge of an anti-gay hate group of assorted oddballs, bad actors, fake Christians, and phony preachers who have so far been relying on the charity of a lazy and overly accommodating Beltway media.
You think I want those bozos to accept MY wedding whether I am gay or heterosexual?
Related posts:
Will anti-gay propaganda artists obscure truth of marriage equality victories?
Marriage equality opponents need genuine 'come to Jesus' moment about their leaders
Tony Perkins |
Like a dozen black-robed activists before him, Judge Michael McShane argued, "Because Oregon's marriage laws discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation without a rational relationship to any legitimate government interest, the laws violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution." The state's failure to defend its own constitution, and the failure of an openly homosexual judge to recuse himself, demonstrate what an overreach this decision was. The deluge of rulings hit Pennsylvania next, where Judge John Jones wrote one of the harshest opinions yet, insisting that laws affirming natural marriage should be discarded "into the ash heap of history."So according to Perkins, based on a poll which has nothing to do with marriage equality, court rulings are backfiring. In addition, states should ignore the opinions of judges because they aren't elected anyway.
While both judges cited the Supreme Court's June decisions as a rational basis to destroy marriage, the high court said nothing that would give a federal judge the right to redefine marriage. In an interesting twist, both rulings came down within hours of Politico's new polling -- which showed that a clear majority of likely voters in swing states (52-48%) are digging in on their support of natural marriage.
Obviously, the Left's strategy of forcing this agenda through the courts is backfiring -- and it's only a matter of time before the country begins to discard the opinions of unelected judges on the same ash heap where Jones tried to send marriage. Just as the country has never accepted the Supreme Court's declaration of a "right" to destroy unborn human life in Roe v. Wade, we will never accept the Court's assertion of a "right" to change the definition of our most fundamental social institution. The courts can ignore natural law, or even suppress it, but they will never succeed in subduing it.
For the life of me, I cannot understand why is Perkins raising so much hell after the fact. What would be so difficult for him or someone like fellow FRC spokesman Peter Sprigg to testify as to the validity of these laws during the trials? What's the point of whining after the fact if these so-called defenders of marriage pulled disappearing tricks when the validity of these laws were being decided?
We all know the answer to that question. Neither Perkins nor Sprigg, nor any other anti-gay talking head blanketing the airwaves whining about "activist judges" or the "will of the people" will volunteer to testify because they KNOW the laws aren't valid. Of course no one interviewing Perkins and company ever seems to have the desire to pin them down on that point.
How convenient.
Also, I am a bit disturbed by Perkins' assertion that the country will start discarding court decisions they don't like. Mr. Perkins should be aware that this sort of thing is not what America is about. The legislators make the laws, sometimes the people vote on the laws, but at all times, the courts decide whether or not the laws are constitutionally valid.
And if they decide that the laws aren't constitutionally valid, then that means no more law. We no longer live in the era in which presidents, such as Andrew Jackson, ignored court rulings while daring them to enforce said rulings. I would like to think that some of us in this country have outgrown that sort of immaturity.
Lastly, and I think I speak for the vast majority of lgbts, I don't care whether or not Mr. Perkins accepts marriage equality. No one is asking him to participate in gay marriage. No one is asking him to accept marriage equality. When he implies things like "we will not accept gay marriage," he would do well to remember that he doesn't speak for the entire country. No one elected him as president or spokesman (hell, I wouldn't elect him as dogcatcher). He dictates no policy, he creates no legislation. He is simply a charlatan in charge of an anti-gay hate group of assorted oddballs, bad actors, fake Christians, and phony preachers who have so far been relying on the charity of a lazy and overly accommodating Beltway media.
You think I want those bozos to accept MY wedding whether I am gay or heterosexual?
Related posts:
Will anti-gay propaganda artists obscure truth of marriage equality victories?
Marriage equality opponents need genuine 'come to Jesus' moment about their leaders
A lot of people in the South still have not accepted that slavery has ended by their comments about Obama...you can see the logical extension of the prejudice of the south through how they treat religion and gays....
ReplyDeleteBush also tried to ignore laws by using his signing statements.
And Perkins is losing the battle with all the the gay marriage victories this year....and he still believes that he can convert someone gay into a straight. Last effort of a dying belief that will take centuries to change some peoples's mind.
I do not get his blanket statements, that all of America is going more against gay marriage as time goes on as they have been with abortions. Um, so many have abortions we have to have anti-abortion protestors out there to try to stop them, so that is clearly untrue or delusional. But maybe that is the point? A lie told often enough, and loud enough, becomes "truth"...that was Hitler's motto anyways, and it does have some merit. See, if we can gain some agreement by snagging the attention of a few less educated people, over time it could snowball into a mass frenzy of hate and pride, we can demonize a few groups as inferiors and dangerous to our motherland and make "purification" steps to remedy that. There is only one problem I see here for this to work out right...this guy is not a great orator and is not well followed. In addition, Hitler rose to power on desperate times, and right now things are not all that bad, sure gas prices suck but still...
ReplyDeleteSo, I think he will be relegated to the dust bin of time and we can go on ignoring him. Extinction: letting the child cry, whine, stomp feet, have a fit over not getting his way without paying any attention to him until he realizes his tactics do not work to gain favor, so he quits.
I'm curious. Whose Marriages have been destroyed by these rulings?
ReplyDeleteHow exactly does he picture people "discarding the opinions of unelected judges"? How is that supposed to work?
ReplyDeleteIs he picturing some kind of popular uprising? That seems unlikely, given the way public opinion has increasingly shifted.
He mentions something about voters in swing states, so maybe he's thinking there's a legislative solution. I don't know what he thinks is going to work when state constitutional amendments aren't sticking.
I guess all he's saying is that he's going keep whining about it and never accept it himself. If that's the case, he can knock himself out. Throw all the tantrums you want to, kid, as long as you're not succeeding at hurting people.