Ted Cruz Introduces Legislation To Stop Marriage Equality

Ted Cruz Introduces Legislation To Stop Marriage Equality
Days before the U.S. Supreme Court hears arguments on same-sex marriage, Senator Ted Cruz has filed two bills to protect states that bar gay couples from marrying.

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Marriage at the Supreme Court 2.0: Windsor, Perry, and Context — Part I

Marriage at the Supreme Court 2.0: Windsor, Perry, and Context — Part I

BY ARI EZRA WALDMAN

Speak NowKenji Yoshino, the Chief Justice Earl Warren Professor of Constitutional Law at NYU School of Law, has written an outstanding book: Speak Now: The Story of Hollingsworth v. PerryPerry was not the first marriage equality case. Nor, Professor Yoshino noted recently, did it create the most important legal precedent (that’s Windsor). But Perry accomplished two essential functions, without which we would not be on the precipice of a nationwide marriage equality right: it launched marriage equality into the public conscience and used the unique environment of an adversarial trial to put our opponents’ anti-gay arguments in stark relief. From there, the dominoes fell rapidly in our favor.

Less than one week away from oral argument at the Supreme Court in the most recent (and likely last) round of marriage equality cases, it is fitting to take Professor Yoshino’s invitation to look back and understand the historical context that brought us here. For this retelling (and there are many possible retellings of the history of the marriage equality fight), I will connect the dots between some of the major legal precedents. Professor Yoshino’s text is the seminal work on one of them — Hollingsworth v. Perry. Let’s see the bigger picture.

I will argue that although a multi-pronged strategy of growing public support, legislative action, and on-the-ground activism was important for marriage equality’s success, without legal boldness and a courtroom strategy, much of the political work would not have mattered.

When, in the 1972 one-line order in Baker v. Nelson, the Supreme Court decided that the freedom to marry a person of the same sex did not raise any questions of federal law and, thus, could not be addressed in a federal court, the gay rights movement faced several options: give up on marriage, work state by state to amend marriage laws, or build the legal framework for a future federal fight on marriage equality. A non-monolithic movement, gay rights activists dabbled in each, but the latter was the most important.

CONTINUED, AFTER THE JUMP

A constitutional right to marry for gay persons made little sense if the Constitution didn’t protect gay persons at all. In fact, the situation in the 1970s and 1980s (even through the 1990s) was much worse: the Constitution saw gay persons as presumptive criminals. Anti-sodomy laws criminalized behavior that was not only common to the gay community, but so primary to our expression of love that the conduct had to be seen as synonymous with our identity. So, if anti-sodomy laws that targeted gays were constitutional, as the Supreme Court said in 1986 in Bowers v. Hardwick, then the Constitution was saying that activity so bound up with gay identity could be the basis of criminal sanction. That turned gay persons into presumptive criminals.

BowersIt would take until 2003, in Lawrence v. Texas, for the Supreme Court to reverse Bowers. But along the way, the movement didn’t stand still. It went state by state, with a political and litigation strategy that not only challenged anti-sodomy laws, but wrapped in other rights and opportunities into a broader fight. It was at this time that advocates started to shift their emphasis from seeking pure “freedom” — including speech and sex — to more aggressively seeking constitutional protections for a discriminated minority.

Colorado offered a perfect test for the Constitutional protection battle. In 1992, 53 percent of Colorado voters voted for (and enacted) Amendment 2 to the state’s constitution, stating that the only way gay persons could win civil rights protections is if the people of Colorado agreed to amend the constitution. That is, no city council, no county board, and not even the state legislature could pass a pro-equality measure that included protections for gay people. A coalition of Lambda Legal, the ACLU, and a local group, prevented implementation and won a 6-3 victory at the Supreme Court, which declared Amendment 2 unconstitutional in the 1996 case of Romer v. Evans.

Evans-v-romerIt was the first positive watershed moment in the marriage equality journey because it was the first time the Supreme Court recognized that gay persons had rights under the Constitution and that mere hatred of — or “animus” toward — gays was not a valid reason to pass a discriminatory law. Romer (plaintiffs at right) was also the first Supreme Court case where the Court waded through the multitude of so-called justifications for anti-gay discrimination: children, morality, history and tradition. Judges that have decided marriage equality cases over the last several years always reached back to Romer to shoot down those lingering pretextual justifications.

From RomerBowers immediately seemed like bad law: anti-gay sodomy laws that specifically target activity central to gay identity were passed out of pure animus toward gays. Lawrence found such laws unconstitutional under a somewhat broader conception of a constitutional right to intimate association. But by 2003, it was clear that the Constitution would not abide naked anti-gay discrimination: gay persons had the right to live and love just like heterosexuals. This meant several things. First, the notion that marriage discrimination against gays doesn’t raise a federal constitution issue is dead. If the Constitution protects our right not to be discriminated against, a law that discriminates against us raises constitutional concern. Second, it tees up the marriage strategy.

If we could intimately associate with the person we saw fit regardless of gender or sexual orientation, then the freedom to make that intimate association official — and enjoy the honorific and practical benefits of marriage — seemed evident. Advocates reached back to myriad Supreme Court cases — from Griswold v. Connecticut (contraception) to Loving v. Virginia (interracial marriage) — that declared marriage a fundamental right. It made sense: gays were protected under the Constitution such that their rights, like all persons, are guaranteed as against popular discrimination. Marriage should be included among that panoply of rights.

Several couples in Hawaii went first, despite some remaining ambivalence in the community among seeking marriage rights outright. When a court said that preventing gays from marrying required the state to meet a heavy constitutional burden, a conservative Congress reacted swiftly, passing the inaptly named Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). DOMA enshrined opposite-sex marriage into federal law. It said that whatever one state did about same-sex marriage, gays would never really be married in the eyes of the federal government. Nor did any other state have to follow a pro-equality state. The law pre-emptively cut off the flow of thousands of rights to future gay couples and relegated gays once again to second-class citizenship.

The multi-pronged strategy to win marriage equality nation wide now kicked into high gear. Stay tuned for Part II.

***

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Ari Ezra Waldman is a professor of law and the Director of the Institute for Information Law and Policy at New York Law School. He holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University, a J.D. from Harvard Law School, and a B.A. from Harvard College. Ari writes regular posts on law and various LGBT issues.


Ari Ezra Waldman

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/marriage-at-the-supreme-court-20-windsor-perry-and-context.html

Why the American Family Needs Same-Sex Parents

Why the American Family Needs Same-Sex Parents
On April 28th, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in an omnibus case about whether same-sex couples are allowed to marry in all 50 states in this country. The probability of the court ruling in favor of legalization likely played a role in the Indiana and Arkansas controversies over the passage of their Religious Freedom Restoration Acts at the beginning of April.

Proponents and opponents of marriage for same-sex couples agree that heated debates about religious liberty are one effect of the marriage debate. But they strongly disagree about what America and its families will look like if same-sex couples can marry throughout the nation. Opponents have made dire predictions of marital instability, falling birth rates, and increases in children being born outside of marriage — in short, the destruction of American families.

But an examination of the data — particularly as it relates to the children in this country most in need of loving and stable families — does not support those predictions.

In a recent friend-of-the-court brief that I submitted to the Supreme Court, I explore what demographic and social science research tells us about the impact of the upcoming ruling. Today, nearly 1.4 million men and women are part of the estimated 700,000 same-sex couples living in this country. About 350,000 of them are married couples and 122,000 are raising more than 200,000 children under the age of 18.

Michigan couple April DeBoer and Jayne Rouse, plaintiffs in one of the cases currently before the Supreme Court, offer an example of how same-sex couples already play an outsized role in caring for some of the nation’s most vulnerable kids. They have adopted four children, two with developmental disabilities who require special care. U.S. Census Bureau data show that April and Jayne are not alone.

Same-sex couples are three times more likely than their different-sex counterparts to be raising adopted or foster children. Among married couples, same-sex couples are five times more likely. In states where same-sex couples can legally marry, more than three percent of adopted or foster children have same-sex parents. Since only about 0.3 percent of all children in those states have same-sex parents, it means that adopted and foster children there are nearly 10 times more likely than children in general to have same-sex parents.

As marriage becomes more widely available for same-sex couples, they will likely expand their already disproportionate role as parents to some of the nation’s neediest children. In 2013, 19 percent of same-sex couples without children were married compared to 33 percent of those with children. If they had adopted or foster children, the figure was 41 percent. In states where same-sex couples can marry, 60 percent of those with adopted or foster children are married. Clearly same-sex couples raising kids, especially adopted and foster kids, have a strong preference for marriage.

Opponents of marriage for same-sex couples argue that children do best when they are raised by their married biological parents. They reason that reserving marriage only for different-sex couples promotes that ideal. Assuming that kids do best with married moms and dads is a false read of social science research. A more careful review of the literature shows that children tend to do better when they are raised by two parents who are in a stable and committed relationship. Marriage offers a way for many couples to strengthen and support their desire for stability, love and commitment. Kids with married parents, regardless of the sexual orientation or gender of those parents, benefit from the security that marriage offers to many couples.

What about the argument that reserving marriage for different-sex couples encourages them to raise children within marriage? This argument implies that allowing same-sex couples to marry might decrease the likelihood that different-sex couples decide to marry and have kids. Even if every same-sex couple in the country got married tomorrow, they’d only represent about one percent of all married couples. The notion that their marriages could alter the behavior of the other 99 percent of married couples (and unmarried heterosexuals for that matter), especially regarding such important and personal decisions like whether or not to marry or have children, seems ludicrous on the face of it. It turns out that the research agrees.

Two studies published last year in Demography, the premier academic journal in the field, find no evidence that allowing same-sex couples to marry has altered the marriage rates of different-sex couples in the U.S. or in the Netherlands, the country that has allowed same-sex couples to marry longer than any other in the world. In 2013, the portion of children being raised by married different-sex parents in the U.S. was actually a little bit higher in states where same-sex couples could legally marry (65 percent) compared to states where marriage was restricted to different-sex couples (64 percent).

The recent events in Indiana and Arkansas prove that a Supreme Court decision bringing marriage for same-sex couples to all parts of the nation won’t end political conflict associated with LGBT rights. But it will improve America’s families. The nation will have more married couples, more kids with married parents, and more stable homes and families for the country’s most vulnerable children. It’s hard to understand how that could ever be a bad thing.

This article was written for Thinking L.A., a partnership of UCLA and Zócalo Public Square.

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www.huffingtonpost.com/gary-j-gates/why-the-american-family-n_b_7131516.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

You’ve Never Seen Anything Like Dave’s Epic Strut

You’ve Never Seen Anything Like Dave’s Epic Strut

How about that guy Dave? He saved so much money on car insurance that he went all Beyoncé on usThis advertisement for MoneySuperMarket premiered in January but just came to our attention today so if you haven’t already seen it, you’re welcome. Yanis Marshall, consider yourself served.

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/WMMmDDeqnkc/youve-never-seen-anything-like-daves-epic-strut-20150423

Demon-Obsessed Anti-gay Colorado Rep. Gordon Klingenschmitt Announces State Senate Bid: VIDEO

Demon-Obsessed Anti-gay Colorado Rep. Gordon Klingenschmitt Announces State Senate Bid: VIDEO

Klingenschmitt

Demon-obsessed homophobe, religious zealot and Colorado House of Representatives embarrassment Gordon Klingenschmitt has announced his plans to run for a state Senate seat, The Gazeltte reports:

Klingenschmitt, R-Colorado Springs, went through a list of his accomplishments in the state Legislature Wednesday at the Airplane Restaurant. He also discussed his attempts to “fight for Republican principles” that didn’t make it through the Democrat-controlled House. He took a small handful of questions limited to constituents in House District 15, teasing his “plans for 2016” along the way, before announcing he plans to run for Senate District 12.

The seat is held by Senate President Bill Cadman, who will reach his term limit in 2016.

Kligenschmitt added that he fasted for 72 hours before the Wednesday night meeting to ask God about his political future. Klingenschmitt’s state Senate aspirations are thus little more than hunger-induced delusions. 

Earlier this month, Klingenschmitt made the prediction that gays will ‘recruit’ 20% of all children by the next century. 

Watch a report on Klingenschmitt’s announcement, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/klingsenate.html

The Best Madonna Impersonator on the Web Is Back, And She's Not a Drag Queen

The Best Madonna Impersonator on the Web Is Back, And She's Not a Drag Queen
2015-04-20-1429552120-5196467-tumblr_mjmilaaEpR1ri1l41o1_1280.jpg

The best Madonna impersonator is exploding on the web right now, and to the internet’s surprise, it isn’t a drag queen. Comedian and writer Nadya Ginsburg is known for a nuanced string of characters (Cher, Britney Spears), being hailed most recently for her beloved web series, The Madonnalogues. After an 8 episode run, Ginsberg is back to crowd funding, which funded her first season in hopes to fund another. Sticking to DIY, Ginsberg takes the indie route via Kickstarter, allowing the fans to directly contribute to the creators of the original content they enjoy. While I’ve seen numerous jokes, write ups, and bad impressions of Madonna lately, Ginsberg offers something refreshing and funny, as well as convincing. This doesn’t shock me, as she served as a comedy writer for the late Joan Rivers for a few years, as well as performed alongside Amy Poehler and Sarah Silverman in LA over the span of her career. If you wish to support Nadya, you can donate to the Kickstarter here.

You can also check out the first season of The Madonnalogues online below:

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