First is Michael Medved, "Gay Marriage Myths and Truth." This is an incredible fisking. Readers should spend some time with it, for example:
3. ”Failure to sanction gay marriage is based on the assumption that “same sex couples simply are not as good as opposite sex couples.” (This language appears verbatim in the judge’s decision).The second piece is Ed Whelan's epic smackdown, "The Most Egregious Performance Ever by a Federal District Judge." The essay takes a look from start to finish to show that intellectually, morally, politically, socially, and legally is Judge Vaughn Walker's ruling:
TRUTH: Opposition to government sanction of gay marriages isn’t based on the notion that opposite sex couples are “better,” but on the idea that they are more consequential, and serve an important social purpose more effectively. Laws in every state recognize the desirability that children should be raised by their biological parents, wherever possible. This is based on the universal, common sense assumption that a child generally will fare best if it is raised by both its birth mother and birth father. Laws on divorce, child custody, adoption and foster-parenting all display this general preference for birth parents to involve themselves in a child’s life. Traditional opposite sex marriage generally produces a situation where both birth parents will participate in parenting – and this shared responsibility even survives divorce in most cases. There is no chance--none—that a same sex marriage can produce a child who will be raised by both birth parents. This doesn’t make that same sex marriage hateful or immoral, but it does make it somewhat less desirable and less significant for society.
4. “Recognizing gay marriage would do nothing to harm existing opposite sex marriages.”
TRUTH: The problem with government endorsement of same sex marriage isn’t damage it would do to current heterosexual couples, but the profound change it would bring to the institution of marriage itself. In every civilization known to historians and anthropologists, marriage involves the union of man and woman—and the recognition that combining the two genders produces a durable unit that is very different from any all-male or all-female combination. The argument for gay marriage depends on the discredited and destructive idea that men and women are identical—that your marriage will be the same whether you select a male or female partner. Gay marriage also separates the institution of marriage from the process of childbearing, at a time when we need to reaffirm that children fare best within a marriage, and marriage becomes more significant when it produces children.
Walker presided over a parade of anti-Prop 8 witnesses at trial who gave lengthy testimony, only a tiny fraction of which was relevant to any sound understanding of the issues in dispute—and all of that could have been in the form of expert or documentary submissions. And—surprise, surprise—every single one of plaintiffs’ “expert” witnesses is an activist for same-sex marriage whose “expert” testimony was just a repackaging of their political advocacy.Via Memeorandum.
Oh, and let’s not forget that all along Walker apparently failed to disclose to the parties basic personal facts that would have enabled them to assess whether his impartiality in the matter might reasonably be questioned.
Then there’s Walker’s crazed—and, as one same-sex marriage advocate put it, “radical”—ruling on final judgment. That ruling ignored binding Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent, concocted absurd factual findings, and grossly misstated the state of the record on key points.
And, just yesterday, Walker’s refusal to stay his judgment pending appeal, the latest step in his gamesmanship to try to deprive Prop 8 proponents of their appeal rights and to avoid effective appellate review of his shenanigans.
Walker’s course of conduct would be sufficient cause for national scandal in any case. That it comes in a case that aims to radically remake the central social institution of American society makes it utterly intolerable.
I can’t imagine that any federal district judge has ever committed more egregious and momentous acts of malfeasance in a case.
4 comments:
That's all you got? LOLOLOLOL. Your side is toast.
I totally agree. Walker is a disgrace.
Walker is a disgrace, but ultimately he is irrelevant and so is his ruling.
The biggest myth about gay/same sex marriage is that it's about getting all the rights and priveleges heterosexual couples have. Homosexuals already have all those rights in California. Gays can visit friends in hospitals(never a law forbidding it, only hospital rules), gays can adopt, gays can conceive a child(invitro), gays can file joint tax returns and claim dependents, gays can hold property jointly, gays can enter into civil unions(secular marriage), gays can be named as beneficiaries for insurance, gays can list a domestic partner for health insurance, gays can picnic in the public parks, and walk on the beaches. Gays in California have the rights already.
What can't gays do? Gays cannot marry in a church of their choosing thereby obtaining the imprimatur of Almighty God and the church members. This right cannot be legistated. Churches are not gov't institutions and God, by the very nature of such beings, cannot be bullied by mere mortals.
One gay said on local television, "Everyone wants to be married. No one wants to be civil unioned." It's not about rights, it's about a ceremony, tuxedoes, white frilly wedding dresses, multi-tierd cake with frosting way too sweet to eat, flowing champaign, shoes and cans tied to the bumper, and lots of gifts. It's about the ceremony.
And gays can have that, too.
Keep gods out of marriage. What business is it of theirs? If your god wants to help out with my tax return I'm willing to listen but other than that it should mind it's own business.
And Walker is pretty irrelevant in the long run. As soon as enough old people die off and enough young people are born marriage equality will be the norm in this country and then we'll all laugh about how the bigots actually used to run things so unfairly at one point, just like after the civil rights movement and just like after the women's suffrage movement. Society will move on and close-mindedness will ever lessen.
You're on the wrong side of history here, ladies.
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