09-04-2015, 09:59 PM
Kim Davis, a county clerk from Kentucky, who would not issue marriage licenses to gay couples based upon her own deeply held religious beliefs, went to jail yesterday for continuing to allow those beliefs to supersede federal law. She's still in jail this morning.
Same Sex Marriage Kentucky Showdown - CNN
What bothers me most is that this is the same sort of mentality that über religious groups have used to justify hate and discrimination for the lgbt community for a very long time. Whether cherry picking religious doctrine from the Bible or using gay liberation as a divisive political wedge issue, these fanatics have been using religion as a means to discriminate for... hell I was going to say decades, but centuries (if not millennia).
In the seventies the movement was referred to as gay liberation. Later as the movement progressed gay people pretty much all fell into a trap as we were fighting for our rights. The rights we were fighting for were conveniently coined "gay rights". And that, of course, lent an easy excuse to conservatives that gay people didn't need "extra" or "special" rights. Many of us were side tracked, forgetting that they aren't gay rights, they're civil rights.
In light of SCOTUS gay marriage ruling, many of those religious wingnuts who no longer have the defense of marriage act in their back pocket now fall back upon the first amendment and scream that their rights are being violated.
A "harmless" variation of this argument is probably what Kim Davis's attorney's will use in her defense. "Just take her name off the marriage certificate," has been floated by her legal team. Yeah, otherwise she won't do her job. Her deep seated religious beliefs haven't stopped Davis from being married four times to three different men and had twins out of wedlock. The church forgave her for that. How convenient.
This sort of religious discrimination isn't just happening in Kentucky either.
And even more, this little gem happened a couple of days ago in Tennessee as well (via Chattanooga Times Free Press:
When FADA was introduced prior to the SCOTUS gay marriage decision the majority opinion was that it didn't have the support it needed to pass. After the decision and the ensuing inevitable backlash against it, these new little legal skirmishes are pitting staunchly (and even moderately) religious people against gay civil liberties concerns. FADA has been "lost in committee" since its introduction. That "lost in committee" description is both a good way to kill a bill. It is also a good way to pull legislation out of limbo to debate as this political wedge issue evolves.
A few sensationalist incidents like the ones above, some media spin telling the same misleading propaganda about "gay rights" usurping religious freedom over and over, and presidential candidates placing the issue in the spot light whether they want to or not... the general public starts to get confused. Yes there are some smart ones. There always are. But there are a whole lot of people who base their vote almost solely upon television ads and sensationalist news. The public opinion poll is a fickle pendulum. Especially when conservative interests now have a much bigger chuck of television news pie within their grasp.
That's a helluva lot of money and influence being thrown at congress (esp. the right-wing) to resolve the issue of not only gay marriage to their satisfaction, but civil rights for the lgbt community. A resolution pointedly not in our favor. The outcome of the Equality Act will be telling.
It's worth noting that no less than four of the republican presidential candidates sign anti-same-sex marriage pledge (August 25th, 2015).
Ted Cruz:
Rick Santorum:
Rand Paul:
Mike Huckabee:
Most people think the gay marriage issue is largely a done deal. On the whole I'd agree with them. But 2016 is an election year and republican's, despite public polling concerning gay rights, aren't hesitating to use "gay rights as a threat to religious freedom" as a wedge issue to drive their constituents to the polls. In addition, largely dependent upon the next sitting US president, Ruth Bader Ginsburg's seat on the Supreme Court may be up for grabs.
I'm just sayin'...
Same Sex Marriage Kentucky Showdown - CNN
Quote:During Davis' hearing, April Miller told the court that the clerk had denied her a marriage license three times, and when Davis took the stand to deliver her at-times emotional testimony, she explained that she could not issue the licenses because of her religious beliefs.
"You can't be separated from something that's in your heart and in your soul," she told the judge, according to CNN affiliate WKYT-TV.
American Civil liberties Union attorneys argued in a motion filed Monday that Davis "continues to collect compensation from the Commonwealth for duties she fails to perform."
They said they didn't want her to be jailed as punishment, but rather, the attorneys asked the court to "impose financial penalties sufficiently serious and increasingly onerous" to make her comply with the court order.
(U.S. District Judge) Bunning, however, apparently felt she deserved jail time, but he also told Davis she could end her incarceration by complying with the Supreme Court order and telling her deputy clerks to do the same.
He said he didn't believe fining Davis would convince her to comply with the high court ruling, especially considering that Davis had testified earlier that her supporters are raising funds for her and calling her office to offer financial support, WKYT reported.
'She can't disobey her conscience'
Bunning said he, too, was religious, but he explained that when he took his oath to become a judge, that oath trumped his personal beliefs, the station reported.
"Her good faith belief is simply not a viable defense," Bunning said.
----------------------------CNN.com
What bothers me most is that this is the same sort of mentality that über religious groups have used to justify hate and discrimination for the lgbt community for a very long time. Whether cherry picking religious doctrine from the Bible or using gay liberation as a divisive political wedge issue, these fanatics have been using religion as a means to discriminate for... hell I was going to say decades, but centuries (if not millennia).
In the seventies the movement was referred to as gay liberation. Later as the movement progressed gay people pretty much all fell into a trap as we were fighting for our rights. The rights we were fighting for were conveniently coined "gay rights". And that, of course, lent an easy excuse to conservatives that gay people didn't need "extra" or "special" rights. Many of us were side tracked, forgetting that they aren't gay rights, they're civil rights.
In light of SCOTUS gay marriage ruling, many of those religious wingnuts who no longer have the defense of marriage act in their back pocket now fall back upon the first amendment and scream that their rights are being violated.
Quote:Just as some states passed what they called Religious Freedom Restoration Acts in anticipation of the Supreme Court legalizing same-sex marriage, there's now a proposed federal law to protect people who find same-sex unions contrary to their faith. Republican sen. Mike Lee of Utah has introduced a bill called the First Amendment Defense Act.
................................NPR.org
A "harmless" variation of this argument is probably what Kim Davis's attorney's will use in her defense. "Just take her name off the marriage certificate," has been floated by her legal team. Yeah, otherwise she won't do her job. Her deep seated religious beliefs haven't stopped Davis from being married four times to three different men and had twins out of wedlock. The church forgave her for that. How convenient.
Quote:It’s all a bit complicated. Here’s the breakdown:
After divorcing her first husband of 10 years, she had twins five months later; the twins were fathered by the man who would become her third husband, according to NBC News.
When she married her second husband, he adopted the twins.
Davis and her second husband divorced 10 years later.
She then married the father of her children, a union that lasted “less than a year,” according to NBC.
She remarried her second husband in 2009, and they are still together.
“I am not perfect. No one is,” she said in her statement. “But I am forgiven, and I love my Lord and must be obedient to Him and to the Word of God.”
---------------1 God, 2 Kids, 3 Husbands, 4 Marriages: 5 Facts About Clerk Jailed Over Gay Marriage
This sort of religious discrimination isn't just happening in Kentucky either.
Quote:September 3, 2015
Marion County Circuit Judge Vance Day, a former chairman of the Oregon Republican Party, took steps Thursday to create a legal defense fund in an apparent response to his decision not to perform same-sex marriage ceremonies.
Day took action because of what he described as "deeply-held religious beliefs," KGW reported.
"It's an exercise of his religious freedom rights under the First Amendment," Day spokesman Patrick Korten told the news station.
In recent months, Day has not performed any marriage ceremonies, KGW reported. His courtroom is in Salem.
The Oregon Government Ethics Commission voted unanimously Thursday to approve Day's request to establish a legal defense fund.
-------------------------The Oregonian: OREGONLIVE
And even more, this little gem happened a couple of days ago in Tennessee as well (via Chattanooga Times Free Press:
Quote:September 3rd, 2015
A local judge contends the U.S. Supreme Court decision on same-sex marriage has derailed Tennessee's ability to determine what constitutes divorce — leaving one Signal Mountain couple married against their will.
Hamilton County Chancellor Jeffrey Atherton denied the divorce petition last week after hearing from seven witnesses and going through 77 exhibits. Among several reasons he cited in rejecting the couple's divorce, one was the Supreme Court's June ruling.
Atherton said the Supreme Court must clarify "when a marriage is no longer a marriage." Otherwise, he contended, state courts are impaired from addressing marriage and divorce litigation altogether.
-------------Judge declines divorce case, citing gay marriage ruling
When FADA was introduced prior to the SCOTUS gay marriage decision the majority opinion was that it didn't have the support it needed to pass. After the decision and the ensuing inevitable backlash against it, these new little legal skirmishes are pitting staunchly (and even moderately) religious people against gay civil liberties concerns. FADA has been "lost in committee" since its introduction. That "lost in committee" description is both a good way to kill a bill. It is also a good way to pull legislation out of limbo to debate as this political wedge issue evolves.
A few sensationalist incidents like the ones above, some media spin telling the same misleading propaganda about "gay rights" usurping religious freedom over and over, and presidential candidates placing the issue in the spot light whether they want to or not... the general public starts to get confused. Yes there are some smart ones. There always are. But there are a whole lot of people who base their vote almost solely upon television ads and sensationalist news. The public opinion poll is a fickle pendulum. Especially when conservative interests now have a much bigger chuck of television news pie within their grasp.
Quote:In response to the Supreme Court's historic marriage equality ruling, conservative media has endorsed a newly proposed federal bill called the "First Amendment Defense Act" (FADA). Though conservatives have touted FADA as an effort to protect religious liberty, critics warn the bill would undermine the government's ability to combat anti-gay discrimination...
-Daily Signal: FADA Is "Common Sense" Protection For Opponents Of Same-Sex Marriage. Ryan T. Anderson, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, endorsed FADA in a post for The Daily Signal...
-RedState Instructs Readers To Call Congressional Reps In Support Of FADA. A "Member Diary" on RedState.com urged readers to call members of Congress in support of the legislation...
-Family Research Council: FADA Is "Vital Legislation." In a press release immediately following FADA's introduction, the Family Research Council (FRC) praised FADA and urged Congress to pass the bill...
-The American Family Association Issues Action Alert In Support of FADA. The American Family Association (AFA) issued an "Action Alert" to "one million-plus friends" in support of FADA...
-Liberty Counsel Calls for "Quick And Decisive Action" On FADA. The action arm of the Liberty Counsel called on Congress to pass FADA and announced it would hand deliver petitions advocating for FADA to House and Senate leadership...
-National Organization For Marriage "Doing All We Can" To Pass FADA. The National Organization for Marriage (NOM) announced its support for FADA...
---------------------------MediaMatter.Org
That's a helluva lot of money and influence being thrown at congress (esp. the right-wing) to resolve the issue of not only gay marriage to their satisfaction, but civil rights for the lgbt community. A resolution pointedly not in our favor. The outcome of the Equality Act will be telling.
It's worth noting that no less than four of the republican presidential candidates sign anti-same-sex marriage pledge (August 25th, 2015).
Quote:The National Organization for Marriage said Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson signed the group's pledge "to take several specific actions as president to restore marriage to the law and protect people of faith from discrimination because of their support for traditional marriage."You can bet they'll be using a States-Rights vs. SCOTUS ruling as the basis of the fight, although every argument will firmly be using the First Amendment as its base.
......CNN Politics
Ted Cruz:
Rick Santorum:
Rand Paul:
Mike Huckabee:
Most people think the gay marriage issue is largely a done deal. On the whole I'd agree with them. But 2016 is an election year and republican's, despite public polling concerning gay rights, aren't hesitating to use "gay rights as a threat to religious freedom" as a wedge issue to drive their constituents to the polls. In addition, largely dependent upon the next sitting US president, Ruth Bader Ginsburg's seat on the Supreme Court may be up for grabs.
I'm just sayin'...