Originally posted by Kontiki
My apologies, Molly, but I'm not really sure what you're getting at here - or perhaps it's just a case of mutual misunderstanding. Driving, to take one of your examples above, is certainly not a right so we needn't worry about placing restrictions on it. Now, one can argue where those restrictions should be, but I think we can all agree that some restrictions are necessary. Marriage, IMO, is also not a right.
My apologies, Molly, but I'm not really sure what you're getting at here - or perhaps it's just a case of mutual misunderstanding. Driving, to take one of your examples above, is certainly not a right so we needn't worry about placing restrictions on it. Now, one can argue where those restrictions should be, but I think we can all agree that some restrictions are necessary. Marriage, IMO, is also not a right.
The Greeks (again) saw this distinction in terms of what was a legal 'right' and what was a customary 'right'.
The Anglo-Saxons had tribal customs- these customs (when regulated, codified, and so on) became the basis for English (and by descent) American common law.
The United States' Supreme Court disagrees with you about the fundamental 'right' to marry:
" The first state marriage law to be invalidated was Virginia's miscegenation law in Loving v Virginia (1967). Mildred Jeter, a black woman, and Richard Loving, a white man, had been found guilty of violating Virginia's ban on interracial marriages and ordered to leave the state. The Court found Virginia's law to violate the Equal Protection Clause because it invidiously classified on the basis of race, but it also indicated the law would violate the Due Process Clause as an undue interference with 'the fundamental freedom" of marriage.
In Zablocki v Redhail (1978), the Court struck down a Wisconsin law that required persons under obligations to pay support for the children of previous relationships to obtain permission of a court to marry. The statute required such individuals to prove that they were in compliance with support orders and that marriage would not threaten the financial security of their previous offspring. The Court reasoned that marriage was "a fundamental right" triggering "rigorous scutiny" of Wisconsin's justifications under the Equal Protection Clause.
In Turner v Safley (1987), the Court refused to apply strict scutiny to a Missouri prison regulation prohibiting inmates from marrying, absent a compelling reason. Instead, the Court found the regulation failed to meet even a lowered standard of "reasonableness" that it said it would apply in evaluating the constitutionality of prison regulations. "
One of the more (to my mind) ludicrous arguments against said marriage:
"Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents. And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mix."
Requiring only a small change to the wording, one has in essence the argument of some against gay marriage too.
Do you think that there are any valid reasons as to why incestuous marriages are not allowed, or that the same arguments could be applied to unrelated gay men and lesbians?
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