subgenius wrote:Darth J wrote:<insert more here>
so you begin with the substantive and defer to the rational basis at the end, when it is convenient.
You just seem to not get it....so mired in the tree there is no forest for you.
I can't wait for you to show me where that substantive due process argument is, particularly since you think that acknowledging the undisputed fact that a given group is discriminated against necessarily means an assertion that said group is a protected class of persons.
Your "incest" rebuttal is weak at best...for you fail to recognize that a father can still not marry his daughter even if both of them are sterile and unable to reproduce.
It's true that not even sterile parents can marry their children. So can you think of a reason why a sterile father should not be able to marry his sterile daughter? Or, why should it be a crime if a sterile adult father---without purporting to marry his daughter---has sexual intercourse with his sterile adult daughter, when they both consent to it and produce no children?
Incest is not merely about inbreeding, either. A father having sex with his daughter at all is a felony, whether or not offspring are produced.
Do you think there are maybe other valid rational bases for society not officially sanctioning a father having sex with his daughter? Here's a hint: if the father is charged with incest, as an affirmative defense he can show a mistake of fact indicating that he did not know that the female he had sex with was his daughter (assuming that she is over the age of consent). This would be a complete defense to the charge of incest. Why should that be? Why shouldn't it be strict liability?
And on a note related to this thread, the U.S. Supreme Court has found that homosexuals have a substantive due process right to privacy in having sexual relations with each other. Your personal sexual taboos aren't going to work as a rational basis: saying gay people can't get married because then they'll have gay married sex.
According to your position, in the eyes of the law sexual love, regardless of its fecundity, is the sole criterion for marriage.
No, not necessarily love. There's no law somewhere that says married parties have to "love" each other.
If the state must recognize a marriage of two men simply because they love one another, upon what basis can it deny marital recognition to a group of two men and three women, for example, or a sterile brother and sister who claim to love each other?
it cannot.
You're again assuming a legal element that does not exist. There's nothing in law that says you have to "love" the person you are marrying.
With polygamy, the state can limit how many people can be partners in a marriage, and there is a rational basis for doing so. It dilutes inheritance rights, property rights, tax benefits, and other rights and duties that come with marriage by allocating them between too many people. That's not relevant to two partners of the same sex, though.
On the other hand, there's no reason the state could not sanction polygamy if it chose to. Thanks for bringing it up, though. It's just so ironic to have a Mormon arguing that it is wrong to go to the courts in attempt to "redefine" marriage.
With the brother and sister, you tell me: is there any rational basis besides having inbred children that would justify prohibiting a brother and sister from marrying each other? Or having sex with each other irrespective of a putative marriage? I'm not making that argument, but since you are, have fun with it.
All you're doing by bringing all this up is begging the question. Dallin H. Oaks isn't producing any children with his current wife. He's not raising the children he isn't having. Why must the state recognize his marriage with his current wife simply because they love one another?
The whole of your new argument of "show me where the law says you have to procreate in marriage" is nothing more than the fallacy of argumentum ad ignorantiam. (and your contrapositon is well of its mark)
No, it isn't. It is not very hard to determine whether any given U.S. jurisdiction requires procreation as a legal element of marriage. The absence of proof is also exactly what is required in an equal protection claim: proving the lack of a rational basis for discriminating against a given group.
The burden of proof is not on me my friend but on you...your persistent attempt to shift that burden unto me is simply another glaring example of the inadequacy in your arguments.
When you've made a prima facie case, the burden shifts. As positive law currently exists, there isn't a single substantive element of marriage in law that depends on the parties being of the opposite sex. I've already shown that. You've done nothing but refer to a circular definition ("marriage is between a man and a woman because marriage is between a man and a woman"). That's not substantive.
I'll pick Utah as an example. Here's Title 30, Chapter 1 of the Utah Code: http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE30/30_01.htm
There's not a single thing in there, other than the circular definition you're relying on, that is dependent on the parties being of the opposite sex.
Here's Title 30, Chapter 2, concerning the rights and duties of married persons: http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE30/30_02.htm
Again, nothing that depends on the parties being of the opposite sex.
states have, in varying degrees, have restricted from marriage couples unlikely to produce children.
Then it should be no problem for you to demonstrate that. I'm sure your analysis will include an informed discussion about what makes a marriage void versus what makes a marriage voidable.
Because a marriage between two unrelated heterosexuals is likely to result in a family with children, and propagation of society is a compelling state interest. marriage laws ensure, albeit imperfectly, that the vast majority of couples who do get the benefits of marriage are those who bear children.
and yes, these restrictions are not absolute so spare us all your inevitable stretch of both imagination and reasoning.
There is no basis whatsoever in law for this assertion. All married couples get the same rights and duties toward each other, regardless of how many children they do or do not have. And tax benefits for supporting a child are not contingent on being married to the child's other parent.
Utah allows single people who are not cohabitating with another adult to adopt a child. That single adoptive parent gets certain tax and other benefits for raising the child he or she adopts. So this must mean that the state has a compelling interest in promoting single parenthood.
There is no evidence or argument that supports LGBT marriages for there is no compelling reason that they would serve any of the state interests - this is a burden that has not been met.
So you think that in an equal protection claim, the plaintiff has the burden of showing a compelling reason of why they can carry out the state's interest.
You should probably re-read that Wikipedia entry.
You seriously fail to acknowledge that the state does have an interest in the fertility of its citizens...this is echoed in Skinner and countless state laws and constitutions (though you refuse to admit it)
It's such a nice surprise when you post things, because I keep thinking it can't get any stupider, yet I am continually proven wrong on that expectation.
Skinner was not about the government's interests. Skinner was about a private citizen's personal rights. It's not that the state had a compelling interest in ensuring that its people screw and make babies. It's that the petitioner in Skinner had a substantive due process right to have children. The government lost in Skinner.
People also have a substantive due process right to choose not to have children, as a great many Supreme Court and lower court cases have determined. All of these privacy rights about sex are not about the state's interests. They are limitations on the state's interests.
Anyway, I'm still ready to see the laws about having children that you simultaneously assert are there and admit are not there.
and then he revises, retracts, and revises his erroneous position of trying to apply "equal protection" to the cause of same-sex marriage.
Seriously, you need to read Wikipedia more carefully when you're trying to understand constitutional law. You can keep calling me someone who tries to pose as a "legal eagle" all you want, but it is obvious to anyone who understands constitutional law that you really don't know what you're talking about.
an ill-fated course of argument for him, in my opinion.
Just ask Kristin Perry, who as we have seen has failed miserably with that equal protection thing.
Isn't that what happened?