Thursday, March 28, 2013



How Gay Marriage Won



Eager to be eyewitnesses tohistory,people camped for days in the dismal cold, shivering in the slanting shadow of the Capitol dome, to claim tickets for the Supreme Court’s historic oral arguments on same-sex marriage. Some hoped that the Justices would extend marriage rights; others prayed that they would not. When at last the doors of the white marble temple swung open on March 26 for the first of two sessions devoted to the subject, the lucky ones found seats in time to hear Justice Anthony Kennedy — author of two important earlier decisions in favor of gay rights and likely a key vote this time as well — turn the tables on the attorney defending the traditionalist view. Charles Cooper was extolling heterosexual marriage as the best arrangement in which to raise children when Kennedy interjected: What about the roughly 40,000 children of gay and lesbian couples living in California? “They want their parents to have full recognition and full status,” Kennedy said. “The voice of those children is important in this case, don’t you think?” Nearly as ominous for the folks against change was the fact that Chief Justice John Roberts plunged into a discussion of simply dismissing the California case. That would let stand a lower-court ruling, and same-sex couples could add America’s most populous state to the growing list of jurisdictions where they can be lawfully hitched.
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Read more: http://swampland.time.com/2013/03/28/how-gay-marriage-won/#ixzz2OqFlbpsR

4 comments:

jimm said...

I'm not as optimistic as this article states.

Ive read an estimate of 9 million people in the US are gay. That's 9 million people, many whom fear for their safety. Many who live 'in the closet.' Children booted from their homes. Do these facts NOT spell... discrimination... or suppression?

My own fear is the SC will throw these cases back to the states, rather than do the right thing.

JustinO'Shea said...

JIMM. . .I hold very similar questions. ideas. . ..and fears.. . . yep.. will it be "more things change the more they remain the same"? or "business as usual"?

Gary Kelly said...

Passing the buck, ya reckon? I suspect the SC and others in a position to make the necessary changes fear a conservative backlash from those who believe that marriage is a sacrament "efficacious signs of grace, instituted by Christ and entrusted to the Church".

Religion and politics - like oil and water.

JustinO'Shea said...

And where is the famous 'separation of church and state'????. . .I wonder. . .