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#1
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Quote:
The state basically breaks down this way... The north, where you have San Francisco -- very liberal. The south, where you have San Diego -- very conservative. So those two offset. In the middle, you have Los Angeles -- which leans Left, but is actually moderate in terms of other voting initiatives. So it usually goes Left, but it could go Right depending on the issue. So that's north, middle, south -- going top to bottom. Then, going side to side... The coastline is Left leaning, so think of those Democratic Malibu/Hollywood voters...but then as you move inland, it starts to shift to the hot housewives of Orange county and their business-minded hubbies, so it starts to turn moderate...and then as you head even more inland and towards the Nevada border, things become very Right leaning and Republican again. So, when you ask how could something like Prop 8 pass, it really is because California is a mixed bag that often votes emotionally and spur of the moment, depending on the issue or person. Heck, I even know gay couples that voted FOR Prop 8 -- that's right, they voting AGAINST gay marriage themselves -- simply because the issue was so emotionally charged relative to "what" gay marriage was ultimately going to mean in the state. For example, could a gay couple now sue a church for discrimination if the church said it didn't want to perform the ceremony, etc. Frankly, same-sex marriage advocates in California -- despite having things like the Hollywood community behind them, which should have given the issue plenty of air time and "friendly faces" that people could have gotten behind -- have continually done a TERRIBLE job of selling same-sex marriage out here. So it was no big shock to me that Prop 8 actually passed the way that it did... |
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#2
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While I can agree with you that from a strategic perspective a state-by-state progression could work better. However, it fully complicates things from a contractual law point of view. States honor contracts made in a different state, otherwise interstate commerce could not happen for example. So you'd have a legally wed couple in one state suddenly not wed if they move.
There is also the issue that folks simply don't get to vote on the rights of other people. That is what "Tyranny of the Majority" is all about. Talk about breaking long-standing American Traditions. I do agree 100% that the Anti-8 groups did an amazingly bad job of doing anything more than preach to the choir, blame blacks and Latin@s, and get (understandably) angry with Mormons.
__________________
- I hate being braver than the guys I date. - Yes, it's me in the avatar Blog: http://laughriotgirl.wordpress.com/ |
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#3
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It's funny that you mention interstate commerce Bionca, because I was contemplating the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution. If (and only if) it could be shown that the diverse marital contracts in state to state somehow affected an interstate business' ability to successfully conduct commerce, I feel THAT would be a more effective way of attacking the marriage issue. The courts would be more prone to legislate on this cause than from an equal protection standpoint.
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#4
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All of those who doubt that the Supreme Court will see this as an Equal Protection and civil rights issue could well be right. I would simply point out a couple of things. One is that the Court could be a different one by the time the case gets there. Another is that to send it back to the states the Court would have to state explicitly that it is not a civil rights issue. Given how quickly public opinion seems to be shifting (Iowa being a good example, and leaving California aside, where the ballot proposition process was terribly manipulated by money), a Court ruling of this sort could help galvanize a new civil rights movement with wider appeal than we can imagine at present.
I can dream, right? |
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