JoltinJoe wrote:In order to place the gay marriage right on the same footing, the Supreme Court would have to hold that there is a constitutionally protected right to marry in accordance with your preference. Where does that fundamental right come from?
Hell, where does the fundamental right for anyone to marry anyone come from? It's not proscribed in the Constitution, nor am I aware of any court rulings mandating that marriage is constitutional.
By no means am I attempting to argue that heterosexual marriage is unconstitutional (though whether government should be involved in marriage at all is a discussion I thoroughly enjoy). My point is that there seems to me that there has never been a fundamental right to marry anyone. I would argue that just because our government leaders defined marriage as a union between a man and woman due to their religious beliefs does not make heterosexual marriage a "fundamental right".
JoltinJoe wrote:The solution is legislative, not from the courts.
You could argue that, I suppose, if it wasn't for that damned Article III .
"...the business of the courts is to clarify and fill in constitutional gaps, especially on matters where the Constitution is silent or ambiguous. We don’t need the Supreme Court to clarify whether one needs to be 35 years old to be elected president, but we do need it to decide whether torture is constitutional. The sad consequence of the decades-long campaign to systematically denigrate “liberal activist” judges—even though there are “conservative activists” aplenty on the federal bench—has been to delegitimize the court system and judges generally, as if they are impostors who have visited themselves upon our democracy by force and without invitation. So, even if the original or amended Constitution did, in fact, prescribe or proscribe a whole list of policies, that still doesn’t mean federal courts can’t insert themselves. Last time I checked, the federal court system was provided for by the Constitution's Article III; ignoring the courts is ignoring the Constitution." -- Tom Schaller
There's a very real argument to make that homosexuals are being discriminated against. It's a very real constitutional question. When constitutional questions arise, our Constitution prescribes a very specific route -- the federal court system.
While I certainly can understand and grasp your reasoning of discounting the
Loving decision due to the "discrete and insular" argument, I would imagine that Olsen & company have a few more tricks up their sleeve and arguments to make on their behalf.