Fellacious argument, and you know it. Or, fellatious argument, given the topic. Missouri Supremes woulda struck down such a ballot measure per the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. Tell me you knew.Jsc810 wrote:That the voters approved it is the extent of your analysis? If 70% of the voters in Missouri passed a law declaring Christianity to be the official religion of the state, would that be ok?Truman wrote:Seventy per cent of the electorate in Missouri decided the question democratically in 2004. What part of "it is the premise of our system that those judgments are to be made by the people, and not imposed by a governing caste that knows best" do you struggle with?
Or are there fundamental rights that individuals have that no law can impinge upon?
Or are you truly the best that Tulane Law has to offer these days?
Regarding marriage as a fundamental right... There any number of Constitutional interpretations out there on the subject, including Scalia's...
But a fundamental, enumerated right? Really?
Hmm. The thinking here is the Founders didn't get around to specifically addressing that one, and provided an out to the States to define it for themselves per the 10th Amendment (Slave Amendment[/JesseJackson]). But that's just me. Perhaps the version of the Bill of Rights distributed to Louisiana holds a different take.
Personal passion does not the Constitution redefine, Jsc. The Will of the People is the Law of the Land. Don't like it? There's a process to amend the Document you clearly haven't troubled yourself to read or assimilate (Article V). I suggest you look into it.
Or are you one of those that is bent on telling us what the Founders really meant?
