By Alan
Caruba
Question asked at a gay protest event |
Over the course of its history the
Supreme Court has made some very bad decisions and the decision to declare
abortion legal ranks high among them. On January 22, 1973, in Roe v. Wade the Court interpreted the
due process clause of the 14th Amendment to extend a right of
privacy to a woman’s decision to have an abortion prior to the third trimester
of pregnancy.
There have been 57.5 million abortions since
1973—42 years—when the decision became the law of the land. In all the wars
America has fought, going back to the Revolution, the total of those killed in
combat as of September 2014 was 1,343,812.
The casualties of the Supreme Court’s
decision about unborn Americans reveal the wide gap between the morality, as
opposed to the legality, of the Court’s decision.
Now the Court has taken on cases that
will determine the legality of same-sex marriage and here again the morality of
sanctioning this definition of marriage is a world apart from the morality of
marriage occurring exclusively between a man and woman as has been the norm
since the earliest history of mankind.
Marriage has always been understood as
the critical cornerstone of a healthy functioning society. It has always been
understood that children raised by a mother and father are a benefit to society
while those deprived of this union are frequently subject to problems of one
sort or another.
In the United States, however, many of
the traditional morals that served the interest of society have been abandoned
since around the middle of the last century. The gap between liberals and
conservatives has widened.
One result was recently announced in a
Pew Research Center study that found that
less than half of all American children now live in a two-parent household
with two married heterosexual parents who are, in fact, their own
parents.
The Daily
Caller reported that “In addition, fully 41% of all American babies are
currently born out of wedlock. By way of comparison, in 1960 73% of all American
children” lived in a traditional married household.
An earlier Pew
Research Center study, announced in August 2013, depicted mothers as the
main provider in 40% of American households with children. Jennifer Marshall,
Director of the DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society at the Heritage
Foundation, noted that 25% of “households with children under 18 are supported
by a single mother.” Their median income was $23,000 and 44% are never-married
moms. “More than a third of these single mothers aren’t working at all—meaning
they are much more likely to depend on government
welfare.”
What all these statistics add up to is
a nation in which traditional marriage is under attack while living together
unmarried or having children as a single mother have become accepted at an
alternative lifestyle.
Now we are being told that America
should abandon the concept of legal citizenship and accord it to anyone who
crosses the border. This isn’t how an orderly society or sovereign state is
defined. It is a definition of anarchy.
As the Supreme Court gets ready to
hear the same-sex marriage case, the rest of us are wondering why a tiny
minority of society should be granted a right that no society in history has
ever imparted.
How small is it? In September 2014 the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a report that men who
have sex with men (gay and bisexual) comprise about 2% of the U.S. population.
When you add in lesbians the number moves up to about 3%.
The CDC tracks such things because “In
2010, among persons newly infected with HIV, 63% were men have sex with men
(MSM) and among persons living with HIV, 52% were MSM.” According to the CDC it
is contracted primarily through anal sex. Despite federal spending to combat
AIDS, between 2008 and 2010 “new infections increased 22% among young (aged
13-24) gay and bisexual men and 13% among gay and bisexual men overall”
regardless of age.
So the nation has been experiencing a
holocaust of murdered fetuses thanks to the Supreme Court’s ruling and now we
are supposed to abandon the ancient definition of marriage to accommodate a tiny
minority of those who engage in sex with the same gender. If justification for
that can be found in the Constitution, then it can be interpreted in any manner
to degrade our society and the nation.
Same-sex marriage is an issue that
President Obama said was “America at its best” in his State of the Union speech.
Seven years earlier, campaigning to become President, he said that marriage was
“a sacred union” and was “between a man and a woman.”
I don’t care that a number of states
have already extended a legal status to same-sex marriage. I don’t care that it
applies to a very small number of Americans. They can have “civil unions” that
resolve any legal issues, but “marriage”? No.
Just as I say no to those who want to
strip the practice of religion from any public ceremony or remove the saying of
prayer in our schools, I will say no to those who want to remove the moral
pillars that have served our society and all societies over the millennia.
We can only hope that enough of the
current Supreme Court justices feel that way too.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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