M
markomalley
Guest
Yup, you’re absolutely right.Then you have no problem with the DOMA ruling. All that happened is that equal rights were affirmed in a state that recognizes gay marriage.
However, this is a legal question to be resolved now: what happens is someone marries in a state which allows gay marriage, and then they move to a state which does not recognize the marriage? Would the couple still be entitled to federal benefits?
This is the same problem that was encountered with mixed race marriages.
My guess is that the Prop 8 ruling will serve as the first federal ruling to overturn similar laws in other states, because it was found unconstitutional. But also, the issue I mentioned above may well be cause to also overturn the rest of DOMA, which allows states not to recognize marriages legal in other states, but only in the case that it is a gay marriage. On the face of it, this also violates equal protection and due process.
The writing is on the wall.
It’s not a matter of individual states becoming Sodom. We all have.
May God preserve those of us who don’t consent as He preserved Lot.