Is President Obama lying about opposing gay marriage?

hose of us who view as a -dunk, open&;shut
equal-protection issue don’t need to rely on any precedent.
The says that “no state shall … deny to any person
under its the ”.
If there is a man whom my sister can marry but I can’t,
then we are not equally protected, so the state’s treating us
that way is unconstitutional. END of discussion. Or at least it ought to be.

as opposed to individuals are a little more complicated because “deny to any person”
does not say exactly the same thing as “deny to any couple”.
It is hard, though, to deny the couple withOUT denying either or both of the in it — SO hard that when that FINALLY (in 1968) reached the , in Loving v. Virginia, they dismissed
the claim that bans on inter-racial marriages did NOT violate the — because white and black were both equally prohibited from marrying someone of the opposite race — with extreme .

See Is President Obama lying about opposing gay marriage? Daily Kos

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Souter proves a gay rights surprise

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Souter proves a rights

When was nominated to the in 1990, -rights quickly lined up to oppose him: Three years earlier, as a he had signed onto an advisory opinion saying nothing prevented from banning .

But once on the court, Souter stepped into the shoes of giant and quietly grew into them. What a joyful Souter’s nearly two- run turned out to be.

Using his and good , Souter helped produce a warming trend, enabling the court to begin away from four of icy treatment of men and .

Thanks to Souter, the court turned a major corner in 1995, when a unanimous opinion that he wrote for the court finally used the respectful term “.”

Souter’s ruling also spoke respectfully of -rights law, igniting the hope that major breakthroughs would come soon.

The first–Romer v. Evans–came the very next year. Souter voted with the majority in ruling Americans have a right to . He also voted with the majority in the Lawrence v. Texas decision, which in 2003 declared Americans have a right to .

In between, Souter wrote a -friendly dissent to the 2000 ruling allowing the Boy Scouts to ban scoutmasters. And, in a 1998 signal that the court was not undercutting Romer, Souter signed onto an unusual statement by Justice Stevens stressing that the court’s refusal to hear a challenge to a sweeping anti- amendment in Cincinnati “is not a ruling on the .”

Within his own chambers, as my co-author and I documented in “: Men and v. the ,” Souter reacted respectfully when one of his came out. Souter hired another clerk who was a -rights .

Souter, appointed by a , added a parting gift: By choosing to retire when a -supportive will pick his successor, he likely ensured the court will continue its trend toward reading rights into the ’s promises of .

offered a hint at what Souter’s replacement may look like when he said two years ago that he’d appoint justices with the “ to recognize what it’s like to be a young, teenaged … to be poor or African-American or or disabled or old.”

More recently, vowed to “seek someone who understands that justice” affects whether feel “welcome in their own nation.”

That kind of Souter replacement would maintain what’s now believed to be a 5-4 split in favor of basic rights. She — or he — will join the court’s progressive wing amid a sea change in public and legal rights for those of us who are .

Knowledge of that “” could prove helpful: Unless finally addresses two pressing injustices, the court might hear in the next few years to the bans on openly soldiers and on federal benefits for same- married , notes law Arthur Leonard.

Souter’s replacement hopefully will feel a special kinship to him, as he did to Brennan.

Even when ruling against a specific group in 1995 — declaring that forcing of ’s St. Patrick’s Day parade to let an Irish-American group participate would violate the — Souter was careful not to suggest the court agreed with anti- .

Thank you, , for making Americans feel more welcome in our own nation.

dprice@detnews.com (202) 662-8736

 
 
 
Find this article at:
http://www.detnews.com/article/20090506/OPINION03/905060314/Souter-proves-a-gay-rights-surprise

 See Souter proves a gay rights surprise The Detroit News

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