MichelleHeart
Member
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2009
- Messages
- 317
Liberty through centralization. Hmm. Where have I heard this before?
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Oh wait!
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Oh wait!

I insulted you, but I didn't engage in an ad hominem attack, I didn't attack the validity of your premise through my insults. I attacked the validity of your premise by citing the 14th Amendment. I certainly see a need for insults, considering we are talking about you imposing your religious views through the state apparatus and denying people equal protection under the law.
If Tom Woods doesn't think the 14th Amendment applies to the states, than he is stupid and bigoted. He is stupid, at least in this case, because I bet he has read it, and it is very clear in it's application to state law as well as Federal law. He is also bigoted in that he supports applying his personal prejudices through the state apparatus.
The Founders didn't have a 14th Amendment. But the writers of the 14th Amendment did make it clear that it applied to the states. All states must provide equal protection under the law.
And the Founders were inspired by the Roman Republic and the Athenian Government model. But bathhouses have nothing to do with equal protection under the law, and bathouses were used by homos and heteros, so I have no idea what you are trying to get at.
I disagree. The Bill of Rights applies to the feds not the states. Just because......
i do not care what any state says on the matter, there is no such as "gay marriage," and never can be. Mark my words, god will judge this country
i do not care what any state says on the matter, there is no such as "gay marriage," and never can be. Mark my words, god will judge this country
poor brainwashed kid.
This argument would make sense if a state judge ruled. However, it was in federal court. So yes, an amendment to the California Constitution was ruled unconstitutional under the Federal Constitution.
If the Bill of Rights doesn't apply to the states, then couldn't the states just nullify all of my natural rights at the state level, thus rendering the Bill of Rights useless? I do see that the 1st Amendment specifies Congress shall make no law, but the others are less specific.
So an amendment to the California Constitution was ruled unconstitutional?
Why does this not make sense?
Are Judges > Constitutions?
If the Bill of Rights doesn't apply to the states, then couldn't the states just nullify all of my natural rights at the state level, thus rendering the Bill of Rights useless? I do see that the 1st Amendment specifies Congress shall make no law, but the others are less specific.
They could. Which is why it is up to the people of the states to keep checks on the states, just as it is up to the states to keep checks on the feds. Fortunately, states have Constitutions, too. Many are modeled after the U.S. Constitution, and some are better/worse.
Giving federal judges the power to strike out parts of state constitutions just doesn't sit well with me. I realize that this is indeed a good victory for homosexuals, just as D.C./Chicago rulings were for gun owners, and Arizona's . . . —well, we'll have to wait and see what happens there, but the Feds are already getting involved.
This warms my Libertarian heart.
Libertarians are for any source of freedom. They don't care if it comes from the states, the federal government, or the world government as long as they receive the freedoms they are entitled. This is where libertarians split with like minded individuals who also desire the same results but want it done in a way that does not have unintended consequences.
The unintended consequence for this ruling is the destruction of yet another barrier of federalism. Soon states will have no constitutions, no bill of rights, no government what-so-ever, just 50 administrative bodies to enforce national blanket laws for people in rural Maine to urban California.
Liberty is only easily obtained when the government is as close to the people as possible. You have a better chance of voting a horrible authoritarian out of state government than you would DC. DC some 3000 miles away has no clue what is good for the farmers in Idaho. Why should I be willing to give the federal government more power to have an effect on the lives of those people in Idaho?
Whats next... should we go after a sovereign country to enforce similar equality? Where does it end? Tyranny always rides on the back of a horse named equality in order to consolidate power.
If the citizens of California voted to allow gay marriage, and a federal judge interfered and said that allowing gay marriage is unconstitutional, I would take the exact same position that I do now-- that it's not a federal matter and states can do what they want. My posts in this thread have nothing to do with gay and anti gay, but respecting the rule of law which is the Constitution.
Liberty is only easily obtained when the government is as close to the people as possible.
Liberty is only easily obtained when the government is as close to the people as possible. You have a better chance of voting a horrible authoritarian out of state government than you would DC. DC some 3000 miles away has no clue what is good for the farmers in Idaho. Why should I be willing to give the federal government more power to have an effect on the lives of those people in Idaho?