S
Santi2
Guest
The state did not “legislate” marriage. Marriage existed before the state, whose role was confined to defining rights within marriage laws. One can say the same thing about the fundamental rights of slaves. Those rights existed even before emancipation. Emancipation laws did not create rights. It removed stumbling blocks to the exercise of usurped and restrained rights.If marriage is legal (as state right to confer), then it does become a fundamental right. This was recognized with the newly acquired legal status of slaves after emancipation, and with the striking of the miscegenation laws.
The courts interpret the law in accordance with the intention behind the legislation. Once legislation is passed which allows for SSM, then courts can only give effect to fallacious “fundamental” rights. .The courts have further found that because there is no legal distinction between genders in marriage, in terms or rights, roles or responsibilities, that marriage must be examined in that light.
I do not get it. What exactly are you submitting here? That “equal protection rights come into play where SSM is legal” conflict with the submission that it is not the case.Further, equal protection rights come into play wherever SSM is legal, but the SS married people are singled out for lesser benefits, or otherwise uniquely identified as compared to OS married people.
The manifesto of reforms on gender roles which emanated from legitimate women’s rights cannot be interpreted to having “evolved” to SSM entitlement. One would be suspicious of claims that abolition of gender roles, as espoused by lesbian feminists, has been taken up as common ground within the women’s rights movement.So, these created rights you refer to were not suddenly “created”, the evolution of the women’s rights movement led logically to the gay rights movement. Eliminating the legal differences between genders leads logically to not considering gender at all in a legal contract, such as marriage. There is nothing sudden about this. It started at the turn of the century, and then accelerated in pace in the 1960’s. Without this “progress”, the matter would not even be a topic of discussion.