Gannicus
New Member
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2013
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Someone asked about the situation in the the states of the US. It is this:
As of this moment, each state is constitutionally free to define "marriage" to include or not include same sex marriage.
As of this moment, each state is free to constitutionally deny recognition to a same sex marriage lawfully entered into in another state. This might require an example. Say Bob and John get married in California and then move to Kansas. The State of Kansas may grant or not grant, as its legislature chooses, legal recognition to the married status of Bob and John.
These two questions, whether it is constitutional for a state to choose not to sanction a same sex marriage and whether it is constitutional to recognize a same sex marriage lawfully entered into in another state, is what SCOTUS is considering.
I don't have the facts in front of me, but the states are split on these two questions, about half and half would be my guess but it could be 2/3 "pro-gay marriage" and 1/3 "anti-gay marriage".
"Marriage" is not just a social status, but a legal status that confers certain rights and privileges to the two married individuals. Thus, this is a legal and not moral debate. And what is legal in the US ultimately turns on whether it's constitutional.
It really is a fascinating debate. And with some exceptions, I take the concerns from the anti-gay marriage side as genuine. They really do see a degeneration of "moral values" associated with gay marriages. But of course they have no supporting data of any kind whatsoever to suggest that with gay marriage we will have increased violence, poverty, criminal behavior, lower educational achievement or any other ordinary indicia of societal decline (think Mad Max) whatsoever. All we will have is an increasingly smaller and smaller group of people who just don't like the idea of two men or two women having sex with each other.
As of this moment, each state is constitutionally free to define "marriage" to include or not include same sex marriage.
As of this moment, each state is free to constitutionally deny recognition to a same sex marriage lawfully entered into in another state. This might require an example. Say Bob and John get married in California and then move to Kansas. The State of Kansas may grant or not grant, as its legislature chooses, legal recognition to the married status of Bob and John.
These two questions, whether it is constitutional for a state to choose not to sanction a same sex marriage and whether it is constitutional to recognize a same sex marriage lawfully entered into in another state, is what SCOTUS is considering.
I don't have the facts in front of me, but the states are split on these two questions, about half and half would be my guess but it could be 2/3 "pro-gay marriage" and 1/3 "anti-gay marriage".
"Marriage" is not just a social status, but a legal status that confers certain rights and privileges to the two married individuals. Thus, this is a legal and not moral debate. And what is legal in the US ultimately turns on whether it's constitutional.
It really is a fascinating debate. And with some exceptions, I take the concerns from the anti-gay marriage side as genuine. They really do see a degeneration of "moral values" associated with gay marriages. But of course they have no supporting data of any kind whatsoever to suggest that with gay marriage we will have increased violence, poverty, criminal behavior, lower educational achievement or any other ordinary indicia of societal decline (think Mad Max) whatsoever. All we will have is an increasingly smaller and smaller group of people who just don't like the idea of two men or two women having sex with each other.