tommyboy
Footballguy
seems to me as i'm reading this that it all comes down to the meaning of the words domestic partnership vs marriage. I notice the judge used the pro side of the "cultural meaning" part of the marriage debate in his fact finding on behalf of gay marriage yet somehow failed to muster up the same enthusiasm in the "cultural meaning" doctrine regarding the thousands of years of human history he just wiped away. Funny that.If I had to handicap it, I think the Supreme Court is much better than 50-50 to affirm the district court's decision in this case. (Here are some of the findings of fact by the district court: "California has no interest in asking gays and lesbians to change their sexual orientation or in reducing the number of gays and lesbians in California." "Same-sex couples are identical to opposite-sex couples in the characteristics relevant to the ability to form successful marital unions." "California law permits and encourages gays and lesbians to become parents through adoption, foster parenting or assistive reproductive technology." "Marrying a person of the opposite sex is an unrealistic option for gay and lesbian individuals." "Domestic partnerships lack the social meaning associated with marriage, and marriage is widely regarded as the definitive expression of love and commitment in the United States." "The availability of domestic partnership does not provide gays and lesbians with a status equivalent to marriage because the cultural meaning of marriage and its associated benefits are intentionally withheld from same-sex couples in domestic partnerships." "Permitting same-sex couples to marry will not affect the number of opposite-sex couples who marry, divorce, cohabit, have children outside of marriage or otherwise affect the stability of opposite-sex marriages." "The children of same-sex couples benefit when their parents can marry." Those facts aren't going away on appeal.)Kennedy hardly seems to be softening with old age and I hate 50/50 odds.Seems like a 50/50 case with the author of Romer and Lawrence as the swing vote. I don't hate those odds.Really dont think you want THIS Court deciding that.Both sides should be glad of this decision for one reason- because it's time this issue went to the Supreme Court. We need to determine once and for all if the Constitution protects the rights of homosexuals to marry each other.