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rushmc 23
Quoteso if there is not a law specifically allowing something, then that thing is illegal?
Is that truly what you are implying?
Stop to think about that if you are.
No, the state law said marrige was between and man and wormen. the statue granted the state the power to marry them. The court said they law was not constitutional. So what should happen next? Should the court have power to order the state to preform those marriages? If so, which law are they then deciding against?
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln
wmw999 2,461
If the law was unconstitutional, then the choices would seem to beQuoteHere in Iowa the Iowa SC state the marriage law was not constitutional (I am not here to argue the merits of this) That is fine, that is what they do but, they (the Iowa SC) went a step further and said Iowa is to marry them
a. refuse to marry anyone no matter the gender
b. marry everyone, no matter the gender
The Defense of Marriage act was how Iowa planned to avoid marrying people to the same gender. The equal protection clause in the Iowa constitution apparently means that everyone gets the same rights if they're not specifically removed. If the Defense of Marriage act wasn't necessary, why was it passed? And if it was, why would its reversal mean that the status quo wouldn't change?
The "problem" is that some people are more comfortable with the status quo, no matter what the status quo is, and others aren't.
Wendy P.
rushmc 23
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln
rushmc 23
QuoteIf the law was unconstitutional, then the choices would seem to beQuoteHere in Iowa the Iowa SC state the marriage law was not constitutional (I am not here to argue the merits of this) That is fine, that is what they do but, they (the Iowa SC) went a step further and said Iowa is to marry them
a. refuse to marry anyone no matter the gender
b. marry everyone, no matter the gender
The Defense of Marriage act was how Iowa planned to avoid marrying people to the same gender. The equal protection clause in the Iowa constitution apparently means that everyone gets the same rights if they're not specifically removed. If the Defense of Marriage act wasn't necessary, why was it passed? And if it was, why would its reversal mean that the status quo wouldn't change?
The "problem" is that some people are more comfortable with the status quo, no matter what the status quo is, and others aren't.
Wendy P.
Regardless Wendy, where is the statue that says it can be done?
This equal protection clause is being bastardized IMO too but that is another thread.
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln
TomAiello 26
Quotenot sure that's what they did. they CAN order the state to stop PREVENTING those marriages from occurring. There is a huge difference.
Isn't the state the authority that legally licenses the marriage?
If that's the case, then the state isn't preventing them, it's essentially creating them.
If the authority isn't the state (say, it's a municipality), then I can see how the state act is preventing the municipalities from doing something.
I'm not sure which of these is the case, though.
Tom@SnakeRiverBASE.com
SnakeRiverBASE.com
wmw999 2,461
The problem with reverting to the status quo if a law is overturned is the very fact of the law having been specifically judged. The cat is out of the bag -- that law no longer applies, so the behavior it was designed to control is not illegal. The fact that "polite people don't do that" is irrelevant.QuoteRegardless Wendy, where is the statue that says it can be done?
It's why one should be very careful with new laws. What would you expect to happen with the Iowa DOMA law being overturned? People to just continue not marrying gays?
They went forward with opinion stuff (referring to Iowa's progressive judicial record such as women's suffrage & Dred Scott), but the upshot is that if the law is illegal, then the behavior that the law was designed to stop is legal.
Wendy P.
rushmc 23
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln
QuoteWendy, I understand your position but, there is currently no law that makes these marriage legal. Only a court order. Therefor, this court has written law. they have no power to do this.
what Wendy is saying, quite simply, is that there does not NEED to be a law that makes those marriages legal. They ARE legal by the simple fact that refusing to marry them is illegal.
rushmc 23
QuoteQuoteWendy, I understand your position but, there is currently no law that makes these marriage legal. Only a court order. Therefor, this court has written law. they have no power to do this.
what Wendy is saying, quite simply, is that there does not NEED to be a law that makes those marriages legal. They ARE legal by the simple fact that refusing to marry them is illegal.
I understand but, marriages are granted by statue in every state. That statue does not exist at this time in Iowa. So, the court has by default written a statue.
I did strike down a law they ruled to be unconstitutional. THAT is thier job. Setting a date to start allowing marriages is not.
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln
wmw999 2,461
The statute allows marriage. The state constitution equal protection clause makes it illegal to have a law saying that marriage can only apply to heterosexual marriages. So the only choices would be to have NO marriages, or have ALL marriages.
Wendy P.
Currently there is NO LEGAL STATUTE in Iowa which grants marriages.
So according to Marc's reasoning, there can be no marriages granted in Iowa until the legislature writes a new law.
wmw999 2,461
Wendy P.
Is that truly what you are implying?
Stop to think about that if you are.
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