The reason I could care less about what the Supreme Court has to say on much of anything is precisely because they do not have the final say. God does. You accuse me of myopia yet you seem to be mired in the shallow affairs of this passing world without regard for the eternal. The opinions of institutions such as the Supreme Court on any matter must rise and fall on whether they agree with the Natural Law instituted by God.
As for your professed ignorance of the type of arguments used by militant activists, I find amazing the ease with which you nearly replicate their talking points verbatim. Both they and you argue for a system of law completely divorced from morality on what are presumptively pragmatic grounds. In fact, this is the first step down the path to a very dark place where almost any law will be threatened by even the thinnest hedonistic argument. Though your attempt to Godwinize the discussion I will ignore from here on, I pause to ask what ground you will have left to stand on when, in the interests of precedent and pragmatism, the small and the weak become prey to the powerful.
You might start by asking yourself about these individual rights you are idolizing. Where do they come from? What purpose are they meant to serve? For me, the answers to these questions are obvious: human rights come from God and are meant to allow us the freedom to glorify Him. Just because we have a right to free speech does not imply that we are free to lie. Just because we have freedom of religion does not imply that we have a right to heresy. You must learn to distinguish rights from license. Recall first that Moses did not come down from Mount Sinai with the Bill of Rights carved into two stone tablets; he came down with the Law.
if you’re going to call me a liar, don’t do it by half measures. I’m not obsessed with gays so I don’t closely follow the arguments on either side of the civil rights issue. not a word of what I’ve written in these posts would be unfamilar to anyone with a basic college education, a web browser, and a layman’s interest in the field.
I expected you to ignore any argument you didn’t understand, so no apology is necessary.
I pray I don’t live to see your peculiar version of utopia, because no doubt I’m on somewhere on your wish list of undesirables marked for eradication I mean reeducation I mean whatever the euphemism du jour is.
your point of view – including the preposterous demand for a gay llitmus test as a condition for the exercise of basic property rights – is a prime example of why the US must preserve the separation of church and state. if its not, the polity that is the United States will dissolve and whatever arises to replace the chaos will surely have the Christian Church in general and the Cathlic Church in particular in its cross-hairs, if for no other reason than sheer disgust.
in american jurisprudence, a licence is simply permission of a public or private authority to do something. a right can preexist said authority or have an origin independent of the authority, or be created by the authority. the practical difference is the degree of due process needed to curtail the license (less) or right (more), depending on how it vests.
by the way, the first amendment guarantees speech rights that includes the right to lie, exaggerate, caricature, ridicule, shout down and annoy anyone, subject only to a few restrictions and the law of defamation.
like it or not, the first amendment right to religious freedom includes the right to to be an Arian, Donatist, Pelagian, foot washing Baptist, Jew, Moslem, heretic, atheist or gnu age lunatic.
whether you decline to exercise any of these rights to their fullest extent is another question entirely and has nothing at all to do with public law. how you personally choose to exercise your right to freedom of speech and freedom of religion is a matter of your conscience and your relationship to God.
I speak on this matter with passion because I spent more than a few years safeguarding our mutual right to worship as Catholics, and safeguarding the rights of everyone else in this country to worship, believe, say and think and live pretty much without interference from anyone. I thank God every day I live in the United States.