NDgradstudent
Banned
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If we didn't have the Court to tell us about justice, what would we do? Our country would be like the U.K. The horror.
What can we expect now?
If experience is any guide, very few same-sex marriages will actually take place. Marriage and fertility rates will continue to decline, and divorce and out-of-wedlock birth rates will continue to increase. These trends helped make same-sex marriage possible, and may pick up pace. I believe it is true that people are "less likely to hold to norms the less those norms make sense," as Robert George et al. argue in their defense of marriage, and many marital norms do not make much sense under the new marriage regime.
Those of us who are Christian can now expect further attacks upon our liberties. Hopefully state legislators will take steps to protect them: doing nothing is often enough, depending on the state of the law in a given jurisdiction. Also, there is no principled reason for these people to oppose taking away ND's tax-exempt status. We don't allow institutions that oppose interracial marriage to enjoy tax-exempt status, so why do institutions that oppose "marriage equality" enjoy it? I'm sure we can trust the IRS to make the just decision.
Similarly, this is the beginning, rather than the end, of the journey to "minimal marriage"- marriage as a contract between any number of people, themselves determining the conditions of the contract. It is quite remarkable that the Court, in its overwrought and soupy opinion, does not get around to explaining why group marriage can still be forbidden. (Some lower federal judges at least attempted to make such a distinction). These cases will now make their way through the federal courts, too: Brown v. Buhman, the Lawrence of polygamy, is on its way through the 10th Circuit and will soon be heading to First Street. Given that Justice Kennedy believes that "personal choice and autonomy" are the essence of marriage, it is hard to see what difference there is, other than the difference is how fashionable the respective causes are. By the time polygamy does get foisted upon us, no doubt that liberals -and some conservatives- will be in favor of it, too!
I like Justice Kagan quite a bit, but she seriously misled Senators when she said that she did not believe there was a "federal right to same-sex marriage." I am sure she would claim that this 'changed' in the past five years, but when somebody believes that words change this often, how can you believe anything that they say?
This brings me to my final point. As the Federalist says, "enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm." The Anti-Federalists may have been wrong about some things, but they understood that this risk includes judges. 'Brutus' predicted exactly how much power the Supreme Court would eventually claim: it would become "independent of Heaven itself." The bottom line is that the Supreme Court has way too much power in this country. Plenty of liberals, such as Jeremy Waldron and Mark Tushnet, agree about with me about this. Normal countries do not have Courts with this level of power; very few countries have seen their Supreme Courts impose same-sex marriage in this way (Canada, Brazil, and Mexico are the only ones, I believe). The European Court of Human Rights and the constitutional courts of France, Italy, Ireland, Germany, Spain, Austria, and Finland (among others) explicitly rejected such claims, leaving the choice up to their legislatures. Changes in the Court's voting rules, or even the abolition of constitutional review itself, need to be on the table in the future.
What can we expect now?
If experience is any guide, very few same-sex marriages will actually take place. Marriage and fertility rates will continue to decline, and divorce and out-of-wedlock birth rates will continue to increase. These trends helped make same-sex marriage possible, and may pick up pace. I believe it is true that people are "less likely to hold to norms the less those norms make sense," as Robert George et al. argue in their defense of marriage, and many marital norms do not make much sense under the new marriage regime.
Those of us who are Christian can now expect further attacks upon our liberties. Hopefully state legislators will take steps to protect them: doing nothing is often enough, depending on the state of the law in a given jurisdiction. Also, there is no principled reason for these people to oppose taking away ND's tax-exempt status. We don't allow institutions that oppose interracial marriage to enjoy tax-exempt status, so why do institutions that oppose "marriage equality" enjoy it? I'm sure we can trust the IRS to make the just decision.
Similarly, this is the beginning, rather than the end, of the journey to "minimal marriage"- marriage as a contract between any number of people, themselves determining the conditions of the contract. It is quite remarkable that the Court, in its overwrought and soupy opinion, does not get around to explaining why group marriage can still be forbidden. (Some lower federal judges at least attempted to make such a distinction). These cases will now make their way through the federal courts, too: Brown v. Buhman, the Lawrence of polygamy, is on its way through the 10th Circuit and will soon be heading to First Street. Given that Justice Kennedy believes that "personal choice and autonomy" are the essence of marriage, it is hard to see what difference there is, other than the difference is how fashionable the respective causes are. By the time polygamy does get foisted upon us, no doubt that liberals -and some conservatives- will be in favor of it, too!
I like Justice Kagan quite a bit, but she seriously misled Senators when she said that she did not believe there was a "federal right to same-sex marriage." I am sure she would claim that this 'changed' in the past five years, but when somebody believes that words change this often, how can you believe anything that they say?
This brings me to my final point. As the Federalist says, "enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm." The Anti-Federalists may have been wrong about some things, but they understood that this risk includes judges. 'Brutus' predicted exactly how much power the Supreme Court would eventually claim: it would become "independent of Heaven itself." The bottom line is that the Supreme Court has way too much power in this country. Plenty of liberals, such as Jeremy Waldron and Mark Tushnet, agree about with me about this. Normal countries do not have Courts with this level of power; very few countries have seen their Supreme Courts impose same-sex marriage in this way (Canada, Brazil, and Mexico are the only ones, I believe). The European Court of Human Rights and the constitutional courts of France, Italy, Ireland, Germany, Spain, Austria, and Finland (among others) explicitly rejected such claims, leaving the choice up to their legislatures. Changes in the Court's voting rules, or even the abolition of constitutional review itself, need to be on the table in the future.