Iowa Supreme Court supports gay marriage
by Rossputin | 2:01 am, April 4, 2009 | 2 Comments
In a unanimous ruling on Friday, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that a ban on same-sex marriage violates the state’s constitution. It appears that the only way Iowa’s opponents of same-sex marriage can now have their position become the law of the land is to pass a constitutional amendment in their state, a process which the NY Times says would take at least two years. (The link above is to a PDF of the actual court opinion.)
Although the court could suspend the enforcement of its verdict, I don’t believe it will given that the verdict was unanimous and given the Court’s opinion that “We are firmly convinced the exclusion of gay and lesbian people from the institution of civil marriage does not substantially further any important governmental objective.” Essentially, the court upheld an equal protection argument for gays who want to marry.
As I’ve said before, I think the equal protection argument is fairly strong, but I do not support gay marriage for one main reason: I believe government should be out of marriage entirely. Allowing gay marriage only cements the government’s intrusion into our private lives.
My other big problem with Friday’s events is that a court essentially overturned the will of the people. I, better than most, understand that we are not a pure democracy, but the principle of avoiding a tyranny of the majority is most important at the federal level. A majority rule at the state level is truly what should happen most of the time; it is after all easier to move out of a state than out of the country. Courts should be far more cautious than they often are in overturning the will of the people.
The Iowa court directly addresses this issue starting on page 12 of their opinion and argued that their primary role is to defend the state constitution: “A statute inconsistent with the Iowa Constitution must be declared void, even though it may be supported by strong and deep-seated traditional beliefs and popular opinion.”
But then, as they jump into a discussion of equal protection and how the court examines a law, they allow themselves to consider “legislative facts”:
At times, however, judicial decision-making involves crafting rules of law based on social, economic, political, or scientific facts… These facts have been denominated as “legislative” facts and become relevant to judicial decision-making when courts are required to decide the constitutionality of a statute, among other occasions. Id. As a result, judicial decision-making in the context of constitutional issues can involve the “process of adapting law to a volatile social-political environment
It is much the same argument that the proponents of a “living constitution” make, and in my view it leaves just as much room for mischief.
The good news about the result in Iowa is that it will further underscore the importance of choosing judges who realize they are not legislators.
While I oppose government-recognized gay marriage, it’s because I oppose government recognition of any marriage. Any two people should be able to make any contract they want. Any contract related to one’s personal relationships should have no tax consequences. Any employer should be able to offer same-sex benefits or to refuse them; having someone fund something he believes is immoral is equally immoral.
Comments
Praise for PPC From Our Lefty "Fan"
- "Zany-ass bombast-entertainment...Hackneyed weirdo communist pseudo-nostalgia" --Alan Franklin, ProgressNow
Featured Posts
- Rising Oil Production in Alberta: More Evidence Disproving Hubbert’s Peak
In today’s environment it’s hard to find good news. But this is good news: the free market is working, and putting statists’ predictions, like Hubbert’s, to shame. Oh, the joy!
- Regulatory Agencies Continue to Slow the Economy
- Printing Money Doesn’t Work in Britain Either
- Oklahoma’s Constitutional Amendment Would Pit Taxpayers Against Unions
- Friday’s Unemployment Numbers: Correcting the Corrections
- Romney Woos Grand Junction, Earns Sen. King’s Endorsement
- The Borking of Netflix: movie service finds privacy law to be an inconvenience





April 4th, 2009 @ 8:43 am
“I believe government should be out of marriage entirely.”
Does that mean you cede marriage entirely to religion? And if so, what happens when a gay Martin Luther leads a reformation, starts a new denomination, and that denomination sanctifies gay marriage? Government is out of the way, but you’ve still got…gay marriage!
April 4th, 2009 @ 9:09 am
Bubba,
It means I cede “marriage” to religion and contracts to individuals.
If a “gay Martin Luther” starts a reformation and founds a denomination that wants to “sanctify gay marriage”, why should I care?
My issue is not what any two people do voluntarily, together. It is what government allows or prevents, and how government causes people to pay for things that are (1) none of the government’s business and (2) considered immoral by some who are forced to pay.
It’s clear from your question that you are “conservative” and simply opposed to “gay marriage” in any form. I am neither “conservative” (on social issues) nor opposed to gay unions as long as they are not sanctioned by government and as long as they don’t cost taxpayers money.
As I said, allowing government-sanctioned gay marriage will further cement the intrusion of government into our private lives. And the possibility of government sanctioning various activities of the private sphere is a major cause for so much judicial mischief.