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Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
Anima,
You're going to have to explain the justification of why it is society's business to approve the proper forms of fucking between consenting adults conducted in private. 

You cracked me up with your co-worker bit. On that note, ever worked with someone who constantly brought down moral because of their Eeyore type attitude? Everyone knows what happened when this person walks in full of smiles and a skip in his/her step and everyone around this person is better for it. I would consider this a societal benefit.
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(July 1, 2015 at 4:54 am)robvalue Wrote: Ace: I can't make any sense of what you're saying, sorry. You sure don't have to debate with me and clearly you don't want to so we'll call it a day.

WOW?.

No, never said such a thing. I have no disagreement to debating you. I will be gladly and honored if we may continue the debate. But, It is up to you to decide, obviously.

Never will I, or have, discriminate and stop someone who wishes to debate with me on any subject at any time. I value free speech very much that the concept of making an argument “moot” I consider it as both a is hindrance on both free speech and denying the simple natural discussion between human beings. Never will you see me say in any conversation, “the point is moot.”

My last blog to you I was saying that:

You asked me a question, in which I was that starting to answer; others came in asking them questions. So out of naturally respect, I would answer them back. Reading your last blog in which you said that you did not only harmonize with my reasoning and, should just stop posting. To which I informed you that if it were only the two of us talking I would behave as you bid. However, because other were in the discussion, it would be considered on my part to be unkind to not reply to them, thus could not stop blogging as you had requested.
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
You said you want to keep talking about legal aspects with me, when I've said I don't care about the legal aspects. Feel free to talk to everyone else about them though.

I told you to stop posting? When did I do that? I said the point is moot, sure. That's not a commandment for you to stop talking about it. Sorry if you took it as one.

All I meant by "moot" is that the decision has been made, it is legal. You've taken it way too seriously.

Clearly we can't communicate well with each other and you take me for some kind of forum tyrant, so I think I'm going to leave it.
Feel free to send me a private message.
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(July 1, 2015 at 11:10 am)robvalue Wrote: You said you want to keep talking about legal aspects with me, when I've said I don't care about the legal aspects. Feel free to talk to everyone else about them though.

I told you to stop posting? When did I do that? I said the point is moot, sure. That's not a commandment for you to stop talking about it. Sorry if you took it as one.

All I meant by "moot" is that the decision has been made, it is legal. You've taken it way too seriously. Please carry on regardless and ignore me.

Hilarious Take things serious? HAHAHA . .

I am the last person to do so. It is how I interment your post and I could of very will misinterpret it. For that I am sorry. It was nice talking to you, even though it was very little.

My pleasure Wink

I do have a question for all, yet, sadly it will put us back into the law but my question has legitimacy to it.

Ok, hear it is . . .

Marriage is under contract law and today it is now considered a fundamental right. Under the ideas of a fundamental mental right it cannot be denied or taken away. However, if it is under contract law and considered a contract (which many court rulings have :AKA Judge Judy ) that can be dissolved, then is divorce to become illegal? What of  annulments?

Because a contract can be dissolved then how is it now considered a fundamental right if one can later on denied, (not want to stay in) and undo, (take way) the marriage contract?

It is also integrating that it is under contract law because it is the states, not the federal government, that can decide who enter into the contract, what it says, and if legal. Right now all same sex couple still must go to the county clerk’s off or some state office and ask for a state licenses. So are the states still in charge of the contract and do they have the same authority over them?
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: I read Obergefell front to back twice.  Maybe you misunderstood what I meant by "legal realism."  I didn't mean whatever gleaming understanding of the law that you (or anyone else) believes is enshrined in the Constitution.  I meant this: "The way judges actually make constitutional decisions, rather than the way we think they should."  And how do Judges make Constitutional decisions?  They take what they believe in, and then find the portion of the Constitution that they believe supports them.  

You realize in saying the judges determine in the manner of taking what they already believe in and then finding the portion of the constitution that supports them seriously undermines the integrity of judicial determinations. Thereby stating the judicial branch does indeed act with force and will in such a manner as to say we do not live in a democracy, but rather under a totalitarian regime of a few judges who may invalidate the democratic choice of millions based on their own beliefs and ability to vaguely interpret the constitution as supporting those beliefs. Perhaps you are right, this is the reality (judicial realism, the meaning of which I did misinterpret) we live in. I sure hope not.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: Obergefell ignored Washington v. Glucksberg?  My left foot it did.  Glucksberg says "fundamental rights are those deeply rooted in the nation's history."  What was the fundamental right here?  Marriage.  Deeply rooted in the nation's history?  Sure.  If you want to define the right at issue as "gay marriage" as distinct from heterosexual marriage, then, sure, Glucksberg looks like it makes the case more interesting.  But that's just absolute semantic torture; we don't think of "the right for children to drive a car" as separate from "the right of adults to drive a car," we think of "the right to drive a car" that is then revoked for certain classes of people.  (Note that the state can revoke it from children because they don't have the capacity to drive a car, and they can revoke it from other people because it's *not a fundamental right*.)

Glucksberg establishes a two prong test for the determination of substantive fundamental rights:
1. The right must be traditional recognized as existing in nations history.
2. The right must be so essential to ordered liberty that justice may not exist without it.

Semantic torture? Such would be arguing that an adjective qualifier serves no purpose upon a noun when in truth the whole purpose of an adjective qualifier upon a noun is to make distinction between particulars within a general category. The red book is not the blue book. Admittedly they are both books, but to say this fact is all that matters and not the particulars of the books is an untenable over generalization, which would contend all books are of prominence because they are part of the general category of book and within that category of book exists some prominent books. This is utterly foolish and blatant example of the fallacy of construction in which a condition of the part of the whole is considered to be the condition of the whole.

In the historic tradition of the nation there has never been recognition of a right to marry anything and everything. As such a substantive fundamental right to marriage has already been recognized as existing with inherent constraints upon that definition. I am not opposed to the recognition of a substantive fundamental right to marriage as determined by Glucksberg. With that said under the Glucksberg analysis the historic tradition recognizes a fundamental right to heterosexual marriage. To adopt the argument you have made we may say the history and tradition of the nation exhibit the engagement of sex for financial profit therefore there is a fundamental right to engage in sex for profit and prostitution is protected as a fundamental right, therefore laws prohibiting prostitution are unconstitutional. We will ignore that social/legal recognition of sex for financial profit has been limited to marriage for profit, where marriage is was an implicit agreement to sex.

Furthermore if we agree there is a substantive fundamental right to sex for profit we would not say recognition of that fundamental right would not immediately negate prohibitions against prostitution as the majority does in this ruling. This fundamental right would be subject to strict scrutiny and may still be restricted even if determined as existing. The majority in this opinion jumps from the existence of a substantive fundamental right to immediately say there is no conditions upon which the state may restrict that right in accordance with strict scrutiny.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: Ignored the intentions of the ratification of the amendment? Pshaw. So did Loving v. Virginia.

I would not say the ruling of Loving V. Virginia ignored the intention of the ratification of the 14th. Remember Loving v. Virginia was against miscegenation not against interracial marriage (to which Mildred loving had a valid exception as native american who was not so prohibited by Virginias miscegenation laws). As such Loving v. Virginia is primarily supported under the 4th protections to privacy.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: And coming up with, as you say, the "BS argument to dignity," or, as the Majority says, "liberties extend[ing]to certain personal choices central to individual dignity and autonomy, including intimate choices that define personal identity and beliefs"?  Yeah, that's clearly not part of the law, which is why the Court didn't cite any cases as precedent.  Except Eisenstadt and Griswold (right to possess contraceptives).  And Loving.  And Lawrence.  But, surely, you don't disagree with Lawrence, right?

All the cases you sight are not a matter of dignity. As stated by Chief Justice John Roberts, "There is no nobility and dignity clause in the constitution". Each of the cases you reference are supported under 4th amendment rights to privacy. Lawrence gains legal support not in regards to dignity (which is a terrible argument which would allow any one who wishes to engage in an act not legally encourage by recognition as being deprived of dignity), but rather in 4th protections right to privacy and private associations (to which the issue of marriage does not land due to it being public recognition). Personally I do not agree with Lawrence. From a legal stand point I agree Lawrence is in keeping with Constitutional interpretation to privacy and thereby agree with it legally.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: And, by the way, regarding "going to law school and reading all the cases?" I have.  I did. And I have no idea what you mean by "the slippery slope that always happens." 

Really? In all the cases you did not see where the precedence set by a prior ruling was then utilized in a subsequent ruling? I am sure you did having read all those cases. Well what did you think the slippery slope was? It is simply a matter of accepting the first argument as valid and then someone coming along and saying you accepted X as valid so what about X+1. That is basically precedential jurisprudence in a nut shell!

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: Do you mean 32 years of Lochner jurisprudence?  Pfft.  Here's the revisionist, textbook version of what happened: The Supreme Court in Lochner, faced with a decision to 1) exercise Judicial restraint and defer to the state legislatures or 2) to grant itself more power and allow itself to review laws for prudence rather than Constitutionality, decided the latter, effectively overriding the separation of powers and taking a broad view of the 14th Amendment that allowed the Court to do almost anything it wanted, invalidating laws for, as you mention, "not being in the public good".

I mean the 32 years of Lochner jurisprudence where, as stated by Chief Justice Roberts:

"Where this Court invalidated state statutes that presented “meddlesome interferences with the rights of the individual,” and “undue interference with liberty of person and freedom"... Thus, it has become an accepted rule that the Court will not hold laws unconstitutional simply because we find them “unwise, improvident, or out of harmony with a particular school of thought.”To avoid Lochner’s error of converting personal preferences into constitutional mandates”'

Ultimately, only one precedent offers any support for the majority’s methodology: Lochner v. New York... The majority opens its opinion by announcing petitioners’ right to “define and express their identity.” Ante, at 1–2. The majority later explains that “the right to personal choice regarding marriage is inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.” Ante, at 12. This freewheeling notion of individual autonomy echoes nothing so much as “the general right of an individual to be free in his person and in his power to contract in relation to his own labor.”

To be fair, the majority does not suggest that its individual autonomy right is entirely unconstrained. The constraints it sets are precisely those that accord with its own “reasoned judgment,” informed by its “new insight” into the nature of injustice,” which was invisible to all who came before but has become clear “as we learn [the] meaning” of liberty. Ante, at 10, 11. The truth is that today’s decision rests on nothing more than the majority’s own conviction that same-sex couples should be allowed to marry because they want to, and that “it would disparage their choices and diminish their personhood to deny them this right.” Ante, at 19. Whatever force that belief may have as a matter of moral philosophy, it has no more basis in the Constitution than did the naked policy preferences adopted in Lochner."


(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: The Supreme Court in Lochner, faced with a confrontation between States' Police Power and Personal Right to Contract, both of which were 1) clearly enshrined in the Constitution and 2) clearly not unlimited, made a judgment call and determined that the latter was more important than the former in most cases.  Why?  Not because the power-hungry Court wanted to usurp the legislature, but because most people thought that "self-determination is good!" and "how dare the state tell us what we can and can't agree to?!" and "those guys chose to work 14 hours a day for 12 cents an hour" and "other pro-business, anti-worker rhetoric!".  Thirty-two years later, the US had gone through the Great Depression, the country had realized through the media and important events that the freedom to contract is awesome until it results in a million people wondering if they're going to die of the black lung from working in the coal mines or from hunger because the coal mines fired them because they got the black lung and couldn't work anymore, and FDR was in office, and - what a surprise - the Court saw its position from before as barbaric, took a more liberal view than it had a few decades ago (again, not a shock, because the average American was more liberal in 1938 than in 1905), and decided that it had balanced its Constitutional provisions incorrectly.

So..., in summation, self determination not good? And a more liberal view? I would say the first ruling was liberal "self determination trumps all" the second would be more conservative, "self determination does not trump all".

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: So, what does that mean with Obergefell?  It means that the Court's interpretation of the Constitution has always changed, and the fact that the court 100 years ago didn't mean for a ban on gay marriage to be unconstitutional doesn't mean that it isn't.  

So what does that mean for Obergefell? Why the same thing it meant for Lochner, argument to self determination and personal preference over social policy is not only bad jurisprudence but ultimately will result in grave harm to the society in question as more and more rulings are made in favor of personal self determination.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: Obergefell's another case where it looks like the federal government is curbing a state's power to limit personal freedom.  Except, this time, the conservatives are siding with the states because they happen to agree with the states.

Ha ha. Obergefell is another case where it looks like the federal government is curbing a state's power to limit personal freedom. Except Liberals, who were all for empowering the state to limit personal freedom for the benefit of the social welfare, are siding with the individuals because they happen to agree with the outcome.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: Listen: if you're one of the maybe 1,000 people in this country who really truly gets the Constitution, has a perfectly coherent and consistent framework of Constitutional jurisprudence, and wouldn't need to make a judgment call to interpret some of its more lofty decisions, then all the power to you.  But that's not how it works in the real world.  What happens in the real world is that this thing written 240 (text), or 150 (XIV), or however many years ago consists of a few hundred words set down on paper, and those words have to be called on to apply to everything that the government can possibly be involved with.  And to do that, men and women bring in their knowledge, intelligence, and preconceptions and do the best they can.

I direct you to comments in the first response. If this is truly the case than we are subjecting ourselves to rule by an elite minority and have done so since the inception of the nation.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: What does the Constitution say?  That's a very, very difficult question.
Whose job is it to tell us what it says?  The Supreme Court of the United States.
What does the Supreme Court say the Constitution says?  That states cannot deny same-sex couples the right to marry.

1. Correct
2. Two for two
3. Not so much, the Supreme court ruled the Constitution protects dignity and security (which people are going to have a field day with) and as such recognizes a substantive fundamental right to marriage. Legal precedence would then state this substantive fundamental right is now subject to strict scrutiny in terms of restrictions to be applied and does not necessarily mean the states cannot deny same sex couples the right to marry.

(June 30, 2015 at 7:21 pm)TRJF Wrote: Those who are so quick to jump on the "rule of law" bandwagon tend to only support the rule of law as applied to laws they agree with.  In doing so, they become little mini-versions of the second-guessers they accuse the Supreme Court of being.

Those inclined to jump on any bandwagon tend to do so only when they agree with it. However, as I said earlier, I am not in agreement with Lawrence v. Texas, but I recognize it is good precedential jurisprudence and that it is thereby in accordance with the law. Something Obergefell v. Hodges was not.
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(July 1, 2015 at 10:24 am)Cato Wrote: Anima,
You're going to have to explain the justification of why it is society's business to approve the proper forms of fucking between consenting adults conducted in private. 

Simple answer is because society is in need of certain kinds of fucking (not just any fucking will do. Two pump chumps are fine if not preferable, corn hole commandos not so much.)


(July 1, 2015 at 10:24 am)Cato Wrote: You cracked me up with your co-worker bit. On that note, ever worked with someone who constantly brought down moral because of their Eeyore type attitude? Everyone knows what happened when this person walks in full of smiles and a skip in his/her step and everyone around this person is better for it. I would consider this a societal benefit.

Heck yeah everyone knows!! FREE FOOD IN THE BREAK ROOM!!!

From a societal stand point society is indeed concerned with overall happiness to a degree to not be disgruntled and thus revolutionary. However, this mood does not need to be effectuate by physiological pleasure as much as by avoiding physiological pain. Eeyor may be cheered by copious amount of chocolate, coffee, or praise as much as any particular type of fucking. Furthermore, as exhibited by the paradox of hedonism the essential problem with this argument is two fold (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_hedonism):

1. That which is pleasurable or painful at one point does not necessarily remain so. Psychologically speaking people are prone to a homeostasis state of default contentment of such a degree as to not be disgruntled or revolutionary, or to allow for perpetual happiness or sadness.

2. That which is pleasurable or painful to one may not be what is socially ethically or morally acceptable to any. If hurting a few really brings up the mood of the rest then denying me the dignity and security to hurt a few causes me harm. If I have overt sensitivity to what is accepted to the rest allowing such to persist causes me harm. Naturally we first will default to what is of social importance rather than what is to personal importance (otherwise society would be controlled by the most psychosomatic hypochondriac in it).

Seriously the cheating girl at my work has driven me nuts with this.
Up to 0:37 if you please! Big Grin
https://youtu.be/rrx5n5OUuC0
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(July 1, 2015 at 11:38 am)Ace Wrote: I do have a question for all, yet, sadly it will put us back into the law but my question has legitimacy to it.

Ok, hear it is . . .

Marriage is under contract law and today it is now considered a fundamental right. Under the ideas of a fundamental mental right it cannot be denied or taken away. However, if it is under contract law and considered a contract (which many court rulings have :AKA Judge Judy ) that can be dissolved, then is divorce to become illegal? What of  annulments?

Because a contract  can be dissolved then how is it now considered a fundamental right if one can later on denied, (not want to stay in) and undo, (take way) the marriage contract?

It is also integrating that it is under contract law because it is the states, not the federal government, that can decide who enter into the contract, what it says, and if legal. Right now all same sex couple still must go to the county clerk’s off or some state office and ask for a state licenses. So are the states still in charge of the contract and do they have the same authority over them?

To be honest I am not sure. We will find out because someone will sue for it. Generally a marriage contract may be voided (aka divorce) by means of stating enforcement of the marriage contract upon an unwilling party in the marriage is unconscionable. To my knowledge unconscionable is not a sufficient justification for depriving a person a fundamental right.

In accordance with the logic of the ruling made in Obergefell the fundamental rights of the parties may not be voided by the State because the State considers it to be unconscionable to enforce. In which case I think you may be right and it will b come a matter of federal constitutional law if a party to a marriage does not wish to get divorced. I did not think of that. It will be interesting to see how it goes.
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(July 1, 2015 at 1:34 pm)Anima Wrote: Simple answer is because society is in need of certain kinds of fucking...

Really? How so? Last I checked there wasn't a population deficiency problem. Perhaps you are hell bent on proving Malthus correct.
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
Congrats to the US. Hard to believe all the progress being made in the last couple of decades.
The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than that a drunken man is happier than a sober one. ~ George Bernard Shaw
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RE: Supreme Court Same Sex Marriage Argumet
(June 30, 2015 at 5:28 pm)Anima Wrote:
(June 30, 2015 at 2:20 pm)Aristocatt Wrote: So are you now saying:
Homosexuality is wrong because they are worse human beings because they don't want to procreate by having sex.  This is wrong because if 99% of the world were to die off, all the medical facilities, and all the power in the world were destroyed, if we had too many homosexuals that were unwilling to have sex with someone else to keep the population going, then we might go extinct.

(1)From a social and biological argument you could say this.  As the social value of even an utterly useless person in nearly any other regard at least lies in their potential to create offspring of value.  The biological value of organism lies in their ability to procreate (it is the reason why we are male and female, as well as why the great majority of organisms on this planet live just long enough to procreate).

(2)From a moral standpoint the argument would be more in accordance with the teleological purpose of the act.  While it may readily be argued that any number of activities may be done for purposes not in accordance with their teleological purpose (sex for pleasure, perversion, torture, authoritative dominance, etcetera) we would say be better suited to argue that an act may be determined in terms of its teleological end (meaning if the end itself is bad the act is bad) and then arguing if the means by which the end is accomplished is of a moral quality.  Generally we may state if an act fails to satisfy the former than the latter does not matter.  If it satisfies the former than any particular actor may be said to act immorally if they fail at the latter.

I'll get to the second part of this post a little later.  I hold that your social/biological argument is incoherent.

Here's how it works:
You provided an instance where having too many homosexuals may be bad, and it was based on their inability to want to make babies by having sex.  This is because with too high a proportion of homosexuals, we may be unable to avoid extinction in the event of an unnamed calamity.  Furthermore, because they do not want to make babies the "natural" way, we shouldn't expect them to step up and make babies in the event of a calamity. As for how grounded in reality it is, I won't bother to argue.  This is mainly because I want to use the insanity of the assertion to my advantage below.

This means that, as long as we are being impartial, if I can provide an example where the ability to want to make babies through sex would cause the extinction of our race, then I have by the same vein of logic showed you that heterosexuality is also wrong.  
Global warming will do a fine job as an example.  As of right now, the population explosion of our species is expected to increase our energy use.  The expectation that a number of these nations will pull themselves out of poverty, thus consuming even more energy per capita adds to this population concern.  The real concern here is that scientists are aware of a "tipping point" where we will be unable to effectively manage the climate as it continues to warm in the long term.  This in turn could lead to a climate that is actually unsuitable for human life.  If this were to happen, slowly we could eventually die out.  Had we only had homosexuals walking the earth today, or at some earlier point before the tipping point was reached, we could have averted this tragedy, and we also could have left the option of procreation available by means of IVF treatment.  It doesn't matter if we can kill of billions off humans, because we don't know where the tipping point is, so we don't know when we should institute such a genocide.  In order to support massive genocide on this premise, people are going to need more than "what if" scenarios, and so I posit that such a possibility, is not only possibly not going to occur, but also unlikely to occur, if not impossible.

Heterosexuality is bad, and we should not be encouraging it.

The conclusion of this argument however does not show why your argument is incoherent.  It requires we go a step further.

We actually never claimed that hetero or homo sexuality were wrong.  We claimed that they were a subset of two different types of people.  Those of us that enjoy making babies by having sex.  And those of us that do not enjoy making babies by having sex.  
However everyone falls into either those two categories, or a third one I while get to momentarily.

Let's assume everyone falls into those to categories, and that all it takes to condemn type of person as bad is to show that that kind of person could cause extinction.  If everyone falls into those two categories, then everyone is bad, since both categories of individual can cause extinction.  However when we say that extinction is bad, we are also saying that the continued existence of that species is good.  

So I ask you, how can an entire species be provably bad, but at the same time, their continued existence be good?

Finally I get to the third option.  You might say, "wait, what if someone is indifferent to either option presented above"?  My response to this, is indifference towards something still manifests as a preference for one or the other in reality.  Either the indifferent are or are not having kids.  This is important, because if we look at the two insane possibilities we have both presented, we would say that the indifferent are not able to save our world in my example, since the world ends before we realize it has ended, however they do have the ability to save the world, without relying on the homosexuals to do something they may not want to do, in your example.  In this vein if we were to compare the goodnes of a type of human based on these three classifications, we might say indifference>homosexuality>heterosexuality, recognizing that a healthy balance between the three is the best way to prevent calamity.

So on the one hand we have to accept an incoherent theory, and on the other hand, we accept what everyone on this forum knew already, which is that a balance of different kinds of individuals with regards to sexual orientations is healthy for society.
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