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Supremely Foolish: Cal. High Court Refuses to Grant Delay

So the California Supreme Court has refused to grant a delay in their ruling allowing same-sex marriages. Well, I hope its justices have fun in the fall, after Californians have added a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages that will throw all this summer's planned nuptials into legal limbo. And to all those judges in California's other courts who will have to deal with the fallout of such a legal mess: do feel free to send thank-you cards to your friends on the high court.
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What's Good for the Gays is Good for the ________

According to logic, the California Supreme Court's recent ruling in favor of same-sex marriage means that the following groups should also be allowed to "right" to "marriage": bisexuals (e.g., a woman "marrying" a man and another woman), polygamists, polyandrists (a woman with multiple husbands), bestialists (a human "marrying" one or more animals), incestuous couples, pansexuals, and adult-child couples. In other words, any type of romantic/sexual relationship should now be given full creedence and protection under the law.
 
And if one or more of these groups aren't allowed to engage in "marriage," then neither should homosexuals be allowed to.
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An Addendum to 'Judicial Math'

I forgot to mention the most fundamental aspect of the entire same-sex marriage issue: Homosexual acts are wrong. Period. It's contrary to nature and nature's God. It's one thing for people to say they approve of homosexuality -- they do have the right to their opinion -- but it's a travesty when they try to rationalize it using Scripture. The Bible is crystal clear on this: Engaging in homosexual acts is sinful. I know that it's a personal issue that hits home with a lot of people (including myself), but my criticisms are not intended as personal attacks. It's simply a case of right vs. wrong, and the homosexual lifestyle is wrong.
 
Of course, this issue, including the current happenings in California, highlight the double-standard our society is practicing: Homosexuality is okay but polygamy is wrong. How can that be? If one "alternate definition" of marriage is acceptable, why not all others? Conversely, if one "alternate definition" of marriage is unacceptable, why not all others? People who support same-sex marriage have absolutely no call condemning polygamy. If people disagree with the underage-marriage aspect of polygamy, I understand that -- but even then society is being somewhat hypocritical, because with one side of its mouth it's protesting underage marriage, while out of the other side of its mouth it's granting approval to underage abortions (without even so much as parental consent, in some cases). This isn't to mention the fact that these polygamist sects are living in the 1800s -- when it was common for young girls to be married. But do we consider those marriages of olden days "rape"? I'm not saying that rape never occurs in these cults; it may, and if so, it's wrong. But for a society that is so much about being "progressive" and sexually permissive and letting everyone do their own thing without interference, it amazes me, angers me, that so many people are wanting to interfere with polygamist groups -- while not even batting a lash at the legalization of "gay" marriage and the usurpation of the people's will. Complete inconsistency. Complete hypocrisy.
 
I know, I know. It's about "the children." Give me a break. If our society truly cared about children to the degree it should, our culture wouldn't be encouraging sexual promiscuity. But we have individuals and groups in this country -- plenty of them, particularly Planned Parenthood -- who find it perfectly acceptable for 12-year-old girls to have "consensual" sex (like that's really possible) and abortions. Who think schools are supposed to be birth-control dispensaries instead of educational institutions. Who think kids actually have "rights" over their parents.
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Judicial Math: 57 > 61

Perhaps America's law schools should start requiring the nation's future jurists to pass remedial math before foisting them onto the rest of us.
 
By a 4-3 vote, the California Supreme Court overturned a state ban on gay marriage. 4-3. That's a margin of 57 percent. In 2000, Californians voted -- by a margin of 61 percent -- to ban same-sex marriage. So now the mathematics world has been turned on its head. Number crunchers everywhere are scrambling, desperate for an answer: How can this be? How can 57 be greater than 61?
 
Indeed. How can it? Sarcastic arithmetic aside, what we have just witnessed here in California is a textbook example of judicial activism at its worst. First, four bleeding hearts overruled the clear will of thousands upon thousands of Californians, who voted in the context of that wonderful thing (I'm being serious now) we call democracy. Second, as far as I'm aware, there's nothing in California's constitution related to marriage, or to human sexuality. Not even our national Constitution says anything about marriage being one of our "inalienable rights" (Uh-oh -- I'm having flashbacks about that other not-in-the-Constitution constitutional "right," abortion).
 
As with having a driver's license, marriage is a privilege, not a right. Furthermore, it seems clear to me that the four judges' decision was based not on the law but on their personal feelings about love. Look, Fantabulous Four, you're not marriage counselors, and you're not psychologists. You're jurists -- at least, that's what the "University of the Internet" certificates on your wall claim. But listen to this drivel spewed by Chief Justice Ronald George: "In contrast to earlier times, our state now recognizes that an individual's capacity to establish a loving and long-term committed relationship with another person and responsibly to care for and raise children does not depend upon the individual's sexual orientation."
 
So the dishonorable Justice George apparently thinks he's Dr. Drew. And on top of that, he's basing his decision on shifty social mores instead of on the clear letter of the law and the explicit will of the people. And how can he claim what he claims about "our state," when "our state" -- the sensible majority of Californians -- made it clear that they don't recognize same-sex marriage? This was a purely ideological, personal-agenda-driven decision.
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