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![]() Gary Drescher wrote: "Jessica Taylor" wrote in message ... Gary Drescher wrote: "Jessica Taylor" wrote in message ... I believe that the Constitutional process should actually be followed instead of trampled on. The constitution is being followed. Adjourning the constitutional convention was lawfully accomplished by a vote of the legislature. As lawful as putting a supreme court justice in the Court when she already declared what she would do as a quid-pro-quo. Would you care to explain what you're referring to? A justice is a judge. In 1999, Margaret Marshall was a Keynote speaker for a Gay / Lesbian fundraiser. The Judicial Conduct code for Massachusetts states that judges may not participate in fundraisers. She also exclaimed her beliefs as being pro gay marriage. The code also states that judges must disqualify themselves from hearing cases whenever they have an acknowledged bias in the issue. In her later hearing and voting on the Goodridge case, Ms. Marshall broke both of these simple requisites. Unfortunately in Massachusetts it is ok to not bother following law, even for judges and legislators. Parliamentary maneuvering has always been a routine part of the constitutional process. You are using bad behavior to justify more bad behavior. You have not explained why such maneuvers are necessarily bad behavior. Because it is a slap in the face to the people who actually follow the constitution. We could abolish vote-suppressing maneuvers (such as filibusters) if we wanted to; we could even have a government by plebiscite rather than by legislation and judicial rulings if we wanted to. There are sound reasons not to want to, and that's reflected in the structure of government that we, as a people, have chosen to establish. Judges and justices exist to interpret laws. When did "we the people" establish filibusters and destroying process? If one more SJC member had voted against Goodridge, there would have been no gay marriage enacted. So, if petitioners favoring gay marriage had been trampled in the same way, would you support that too? I would not. If that it is true, then there surely there is no harm in following the constitutional process and allowing people who petition the government under the proper means to have their voice heard. On the contrary, there is grave harm in holding the referendum, even if it is defeated, as I have already explained. I must have missed that explanation, all I saw were strange analogies to referendums about Jews, etc. For similar reasons, it would be gravely harmful to hold a referendum that would require Jews to wear yellow stars, or that would prohibit interracial couples from marrying. No it would not be harmful. It would get laughed off the stage and life would go on. It is gravely harmful to expose people to the threat of such a repeal of basic rights, even if the threat can be defeated. Any such referendum should be opposed at *every procedural step* by lawful political and parliamentary means; the opposition should not wait for the final vote. I'm curious...If it is such a basic right, then how come other states do not recognize said "right?" I'm also curious if it is such a basic right, how come it is more special than the constitutional process? Following your logic, the 13th amendment (and the first and all of them really) were gravely harmful to make. You pointed out that minorities in Massachusetts are not entitled to have their voices heard. No, I did not. If you consider having the petition trampled by legislators being "heard," fine. By the way courts in other states, and direct true democracy via referendums have been opposed to gay marriage, so using your own logic, that is true justice as well. The difference, in a true democracy, representative or not, there is debate. The gay lobby in Massachusetts is opposed to having a debate. That's preposterous. There has been extensive debate for the past few years in the legislature, in the print media, on the internet, in the streets, and in all manner of public and private venues. Oh, so if there is a newspaper debate, then it is not necessary to have a debate in the forums of democracy that the constitution have laid for this purpose. If there was so much debate in the legislature, and the legislature was so favorable to gay marriage, then why on earth did it take a Court to create this "right?" Also, please explain why the Lesbian member of the supreme court voted AGAINST the gay marriage enactment, since you say this is a basic "right?" Margaret Marshall, an African-American even admitted that she derived her opinion on South African law. Silly me, I thought a Massachusetts supreme court would base its opinions on Massachusetts law, or even US law. Opponents of equal marriage rights in Massachusetts have an unfettered right to express their opinion, which has in fact been widely heard, and has been rejected by the majority of the public here and by all three branches of state government. I'm sorry, but could you name a date when it was rejected by the executive branch? Could you name a date when it was rejected by the legislative branch? The legislature did not vote to favor gay marriage, they voted to abort a process (which as you say would have almost certainly legitimized gay marriage in law). Getting to hold a binding referendum to amend the state constitution to repeal a crucial facet of legal equality for a specified minority is not the same as "having your voice heard". Your conflation of the two is a wild and desperate misrepresentation. No mis-representation at all, it is a depiction of what actually happened, and twice. Finally you conveniently forget to note that the first time the constitution convention was disbanded before it began was BEFORE the supreme court delivered its OPINION. So there were no "rights" to repeal. When a decision is found because a justice did not follow the judicial rules, there is no justice. |
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Cause they're still idiots
Someday, this whole gay marriage thing going on now, the fact that it's even being debated, will be looked at with the same disgust most of us look at the racial prejudice of 50 short years ago. And all of you, who think it is your place to dictate how other people should live, will be clearly seen for the ignorant, intolerant bigots you are. mike "Jessica Taylor" wrote in message ... I'm curious...If it is such a basic right, then how come other states do not recognize said "right?" I'm also curious if it is such a basic right, how come it is more special than the constitutional process? Following your logic, the 13th amendment (and the first and all of them really) were gravely harmful to make. |
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mike regish wrote:
Cause they're still idiots Someday, this whole gay marriage thing going on now, the fact that it's even being debated, will be looked at with the same disgust most of us look at the racial prejudice of 50 short years ago. And all of you, who think it is your place to dictate how other people should live, will be clearly seen for the ignorant, intolerant bigots you are. mike "Jessica Taylor" wrote in message ... I'm curious...If it is such a basic right, then how come other states do not recognize said "right?" I'm also curious if it is such a basic right, how come it is more special than the constitutional process? Following your logic, the 13th amendment (and the first and all of them really) were gravely harmful to make. Well I support gay marriage (or actually don't really care about it, which is the same thing) so I guess that is what makes me "intolerant" and a "bigot" according to Mr. Regish. Or maybe it is the fact that I actually like to see constitutional process followed instead of squelched that makes me a bigot. Or perhaps that I can and do actually speak with people with all sorts of beliefs without belittling them that makes me a bigot. Apparently the supreme court of new jersey is just a pack of bigots too. |
#4
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"mike regish" wrote:
Cause they're still idiots Someday, this whole gay marriage thing going on now, the fact that it's even being debated, will be looked at with the same disgust most of us look at the racial prejudice of 50 short years ago. And all of you, who think it is your place to dictate how other people should live, will be clearly seen for the ignorant, intolerant bigots you are. mike Mike, the correct term is "homosexual." "Gay" means happy and stuff. Marriage is between a man and woman. get over it and tell your homo friends to get back in the closet. I am tired of their "in your face" tactics. Ron Lee |
#5
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"Ron Lee" wrote in message
... Marriage is between a man and woman. get over it and tell your homo friends to get back in the closet. I am tired of their "in your face" tactics. Getting married is an "in your face" tactic to the same extent that sitting in the front of a public bus was an "in your face" tactic. And as your post nicely illustrates, it elicits slurs and hostility from the same sort of person. |
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Gary,
Getting married is an "in your face" tactic to the same extent that sitting in the front of a public bus was an "in your face" tactic. And as your post nicely illustrates, it elicits slurs and hostility from the same sort of person. I like your style. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#7
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"Gary Drescher" wrote:
"Ron Lee" wrote in message ... Marriage is between a man and woman. get over it and tell your homo friends to get back in the closet. I am tired of their "in your face" tactics. Getting married is an "in your face" tactic to the same extent that sitting in the front of a public bus was an "in your face" tactic. And as your post nicely illustrates, it elicits slurs and hostility from the same sort of person. That analogy does not work for me. Frankly I am just tired of trying to normalize deviancy. Next thing you will claim is normal is bestiality and child molestation. Ron Lee |
#8
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"Ron Lee" wrote in message
... "Gary Drescher" wrote: "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... Marriage is between a man and woman. get over it and tell your homo friends to get back in the closet. I am tired of their "in your face" tactics. Getting married is an "in your face" tactic to the same extent that sitting in the front of a public bus was an "in your face" tactic. And as your post nicely illustrates, it elicits slurs and hostility from the same sort of person. That analogy does not work for me. Frankly I am just tired of trying to normalize deviancy. And I'm tired of bigots crying 'deviancy' whenever others don't "know their place" as assigned by their race or (in this case) gender. Yet despite our fatigue, here we both are. Isn't aviation a wonderful melting pot? ![]() --Gary |
#9
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Gary Drescher wrote:
"Ron Lee" wrote in message ... "Gary Drescher" wrote: "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... Marriage is between a man and woman. get over it and tell your homo friends to get back in the closet. I am tired of their "in your face" tactics. Getting married is an "in your face" tactic to the same extent that sitting in the front of a public bus was an "in your face" tactic. And as your post nicely illustrates, it elicits slurs and hostility from the same sort of person. That analogy does not work for me. Frankly I am just tired of trying to normalize deviancy. And I'm tired of bigots crying 'deviancy' whenever others don't "know their place" as assigned by their race or (in this case) gender. Yet despite our fatigue, here we both are. Isn't aviation a wonderful melting pot? ![]() Some of use so-called bigots have quarrel with 'deviancy' or whatever but are merely dismayed about a trampling of process and judicial codes. Apparently procedure is maleable when inconvenient depending on the issue. |
#10
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On Sun, 12 Nov 2006 18:26:33 +0000, Ron Lee wrote:
Next thing you will claim is normal is bestiality Go Aggies !!!! http://www.aggieathletics.com/ |
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