By Alan
Caruba
In 1973, the Supreme Court looked into
the Constitution, found that it approved of abortion and overruled laws banning
it. Other laws have since addressed late term abortions and those resulting from
rape or incest, but killing human life in the womb has been lawful since then. .
According to the Guttmacher Institute from 1973 through 2011, nearly 53 million
legal abortions occurred in the U.S.
By dismantling the fundamental
traditions and beliefs of a nation piece by piece, you ultimate will destroy it.
Claiming this is done in the name of “love” or “equality” ignores the greater
societal issues involved in marriage; the creation of families with mothers and
fathers, and, indeed, the welfare of children raised in same-sex
marriages.
Abortion remains a moral issue in the
minds and hearts of many Americans and now they are waiting to see how the
Supreme Court will rule on same-sex marriage. As Ryan T. Anderson wrote in The
Heritage Foundation’s publication, The
Daily Signal, “There simply is nothing in the U.S. Constitution that
requires all 50 states to redefine marriage.”
“The over-arching question before the
Supreme Court is not whether a male-female marriage policy is the best, but only
whether it is allowed by the Constitution. The question is not whether
government-recognized same-sex marriage is good or bad policy, but only whether
it is required by the Constitution.”
Anderson points out that “The only way
the Court could strike down laws that define marriage as the union of husband
and wife is to adopt a view of marriage that sees it an essentially genderless
institution…” Marriage is all about gender and the union of opposites that is
blessed by the community when a man and woman enter into it. To legalize
same-sex marriage is to degrade the essential element of society, the keystone
of family.
What we are witnessing is the current
high point in a long campaign to remove any obstacle to being homosexual and the
right to marry another homosexual represents an important political goal for
GLBT community. For them it’s not about the thousands of years in which all
societies forbid the marriage between those of the same gender or the 227 years
since the Constitution was ratified.
Clearly the Constitution neither
requires nor bans same-sex marriage. The thought of such a marriage would never
have occurred to the Founding Fathers and the creation of a new nation had far
greater priorities and responsibilities than same-sex marriage. Most such issues
such as abortion were left to the states to determine. Even so, when the voters
of California voted in 2008 to ban
same-sex marriage, the courts there
overturned it.
We are witnessing a homosexual
juggernaut that will settle for nothing less than their own interpretation of
the relations between the sexes.
When the Supreme Court hears the
same-sex marriage case on Tuesday, April 28, it will be decided by a Court that
is sharply divided between liberal and conservative points of view, but in the
legal community, there is no argument that, as federal law states, “Any justice,
judge, or magistrate judge of the United States shall disqualify himself in any
proceeding which his impartiality might reasonably be
questioned.”
That’s why the fact that in late
September Justice Elena Kagan performed a same-sex “wedding” takes on tremendous
importance. As documented by MassResistance.org,
Justice Kagan has a long history of advancing homosexual issues and policies. A
16-page report leaves little doubt that she favors acceptance of homosexuality
and transgenderism as “civil rights.”
There is no way that Justice Kagan
should join other Supreme Court judges to rule on this case. That would run
counter to federal law and would be an arrogant dismissal of the most
fundamental concept of justice before the bench.
What we have learned thus far is that
the practice of same-sex marriage has proven more a threat to the rights of
those who are opposed to it for sincere religious reasons than for those
demanding their services. If there is
any justice left in America, a bakery or florist should be able to say no.
Demanding that they act against their faith tells you a great deal of the
homosexual mindset when it comes to their “rights.”
I am utterly opposed to same-sex
“marriage” for all the reasons the Bible and history provide.
If Justice Kagan does not recuse
herself from Tuesday’s case and her fellow justices do not demand that she does,
the rule of law and justice in America will have suffered another serious
blow.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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