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Krauthammer on icky gays …

Posted by Joshua Holland at 6:43 AM on June 12, 2006.


In which Charles shows that he and Iranian President Mahmoud Amedinejad share some things in common after all.
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gays

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Witness, as Krauthammer argues, simultaneously, that we don't need to amend the Constitution to keep them dirty homos from getting married -- yet -- while also asserting that every specious, wing-nutty argument the homophobes employ in the marriage debate is spot-on*.

It's what makes him the best.

On Wednesday the Senate fell 18 votes short of the two-thirds majority that would have been required to pass a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. The mainstream media joined Sen. Edward Kennedy in calling the entire debate a distraction from the nation's business and a wedge with which to divide Americans.
Since the main business of Congress is to devise ever more ingenious ways (earmarked and non-earmarked) to waste taxpayers' money, any distraction from the main business is welcome.
Well, yeah, I guess it's better for the Congress to debate pointless Constitutional amendments than wasting taxpayers' money. On the other hand, they could be dealing with, I dunno, the 45 million Americans without healthcare or any of a dozen other real problems we face. But, either way.
As for dividing Americans, who came up with the idea of radically altering the most ancient of all social institutions in the first place?
Hmmm, tough question. The idea that women had rights within marriage -- that marriage was more than a contract for human chattel -- originated in ancient Egypt, at least in theory. "The most ancient of all social institutions" was widely polygynous until ancient Greece -- although concubines were the norm for fashionable Athenians. The idea that marriage requires a formal ceremony, with a cleric and witnesses and stuff like that only dates back -- in the West -- to the 16th century, so maybe the guilty party is the Council of Trent, which decreed in 1563 that marriages should be celebrated in the presence of a priest and at least two witnesses.

The institution of marriage has been so fluid, and has been 'radically altered' so many times in so many fundamental ways that it's almost impossible to pinpoint who came up with the idea "in the first place."

You get the picture, but let's see where the Krauthammer's going with it:
Until the past few years, every civilization known to man has defined marriage as between people of opposite sex.
That stands in stark opposition to all those civilizations not known to man -- the pixies, leprechauns, hobbits and those folks from Atlantis. They marry willy-nilly -- hooking up with sirens, mermaids and wood nymphs of varying genders -- and their moral relativism has put them on a slippery slope; they're destined to destroy themselves in hedonistic orgies of bloody cannibalism.
To charge with "divisiveness" those who would do nothing more than resist a radical overturning of that norm is a sign of either gross partisanship or serious dimwittedness.
I would have said "dimwittitude," but I'm grossly partisan.
And that partisanship and dimwittedness obscured the rather interesting substance of the recent Senate debate. It revolved around the two possible grounds for the so-called Marriage Protection Amendment: federalism and popular sovereignty.
More accurately, the Senate debate revolved around whether banning same-sex marriage would preserve Western Civilization As We Know It, or was just more Republican pre-election pandering.

But I'll give Charles a bit of credit here: he makes quick work of the states' rights argument, pointing out that the Defense of Marriage Act --DOMA -- prevents same-sex marriage from jumping from state to state, and there's no reason to think it'll be overturned anytime soon, especially with the Supreme constituted as it is today.

Which brings us to the crisp cookie of lucidity in the middle of Krauthammer's reactionary nougat:
Once the constitutional amendment is passed, should the current ethos about gay marriage change, no people in any state could ever permit gay marriage.
That's exactly right, and CK knows that in 20 or 30 years those arguing against gay marriage today are going to regret it as much as those who argued against interracial marriage a few decades ago.

Anyway, it's not long before Charles breaks the spell, ruining the moment of clarity completely:
Gay marriage is a legitimate social issue to be decided democratically. The problem is that imperial judges are legislating their personal preferences, striking down popular will and calling it constitutional law.
Most notoriously, in Massachusetts a total of four judges out of seven decided that the time had come for gay marriage….
That's right, Massachusetts' highest court has seven judges, and rules by majority. Creepy.

This argument is a perfect example of why a highly-educated populace is so dangerous to conservatives; constitutional scholars and historians studying the Supreme Court have argued, correctly, that the judiciary is the branch of government that is most conservative and the least likely to 'legislate their personal preferences.'

That's because judges, like legislators (and presidents), are influenced by popular and political culture; their views change along with the social mores of society at large. But, because of the reliance on past precedents, members of the judiciary are bound much more tightly to tradition than legislators. So while members of Congress have wide leeway to legislate according to their "personal preferences" -- and the preferences of their constituents that day -- the courts tend to lag behind popular opinion rather than getting out in front of it.

If you look hard at the things conservatives cite as examples of the courts forcing bitter medicine down Americans' throats, you'll find that those cases result from the other characteristic of the judiciary: it's the most consistent branch of government by far.

Gay marriage is a perfect example. The Krauthammers of the world will tell you that the Massachusetts Justices imposed their views on the state against the will of the public, because polls show clearly that (a small and declining) majority oppose same-sex marriage.

But the real story is that the courts decided, about twenty years after the rest of America (or at least 90 percent of it), that consenting adults shouldn't be prosecuted for things they do in their bedrooms. So, in Lawrence V. Texas, the Supreme overturned sodomy laws.

Then came the part about being consistent. The argument that had prevented gays from being granted the same rights as everyone else, historically, was that they were breaking the law when they hit the sack. Once gay and lesbian sex was decriminalized, the courts had no reason not to give them equal treatment under the law -- it's the whole 14th Amendment thing.

Krauthammer, I suspect, understands this. But who knows?

Before I wrap up this annoyingly long post, let's look at an unfortunate but revealing slip CK made down the home stretch:
The solution to judicial overreaching is to change the judiciary, not to undo every act of judicial arrogance with a policy-specific constitutional amendment. Where does it end? Yesterday it was school busing and abortion. Today it is flag burning and gay marriage.
Which one doesn't fit? Flag burning. There've been no recent court decisions that invited a rash of flag burning; In the 1930s, a former Republican presidential candidate wrote the majority decision in Stromberg V. California that gave First Amendment protection to "symbolic speech," and two decades ago the Court logically applied that to flag-burning.

By including that in his litany of today's "judicial arrogance," Krauthammer proves what many of us have long understood: "judicial activism" means any legal decision that pisses off conservatives, or any legal issue that they care to beat around election time.

*To be fair, The Hammer never says that gay marriage threatens straight couples' marriages. I gues he's got to leave something for the good folks at WorldNetDaily.

Digg!

Joshua Holland is a staff writer at Alternet and a regular contributor to The Gadflyer.


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GOP and Democrat activists are working hard to keep the political debate focused on wedge issues!
Posted by: cry0fan on Jun 12, 2006 7:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And Alternet and mr holland are doing their share of work making sure that the American political debate is focused on social issues, on wedge issues that have little to do with affecting the everyday lives of the vast majority of American. The PseudoLeft is making sure that the majority of American realize that leftism is not really designed to help the majority of americans, but really only to help small segments of Americans. That way the overclass can alienate the American majority from Leftism.

Of course the brand of leftism that is pushed by Holland, Alternet, Salon, Mother Jones, PBS, NPR, et al., is really PSEUDOLeftism. A false leftism designed by the overclass and implemented by nonprofit organizations that were funded and set up by the overclass with a mission to divert the American Leftist platform from economic populist issues to social wedge issues and identity politics.

Good job, Holland. You are in like Flynn with the overclass and PseudoLeftism. Methinks you gonna be moving on to bigger and better things now that you have consistently shown the overclass that you can be depended on to do their dirty propaganda work for them.

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NEWSFLASH
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Jun 12, 2006 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gay marriage is already legal in one state... heterosexuals still marry (and divorce) like they always did. The sun still rises. And we still face all the FAR more important issues we did before... only now we still have right-wing nuts who try every few weeks, it seems to overturn gay marriage for no good goddamned reason to contend with.

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Wedge Issue
Posted by: particle on Jun 12, 2006 9:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's always good to dissect badly written essays.

However Krauthamer and his ilk are doing a good job of throwing up Republican chaff, to which the left adds its share of noise. Reducing the discourse that represents the grand American experiment in democracy to a battle for dominion over anal parts is depressing. And yeah, it's icky too.

Welcome to kooky, bottomfeeding Tabloid Nation. Nostradamus predicts alien alligator Elvis babies will burn flags and perform lewd acts on the White House lawn.

Enough already!

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where
Posted by: lamar on Jun 12, 2006 9:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like how cryofan's overclass is an amalgam of special interests run by evil white guys with their non-profits and special interests, but then the evil white guy is also the primary oppressed by the overclass. Nice!!! If your whole point is that corporations exhibit too much control over society, then we can agree there. It is my understanding the Alternet writes regularly about such issues. Perhaps you can direct me to a place where your overclass theory resides?

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I now pronounce you...
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Jun 12, 2006 1:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
what? husband and husband?

I am against the wingnuts on issues of any substance, but on this one I don't get what the deal is. Marriage is clearly between a man and a woman. The evidence is overwhelming. I can't even believe anyone could think otherwise. I can't see the logic at all. It's like trying to understand why someone sees black when I clearly see white. I mean it makes no sense at all. I can clearly see why some people are gay but I can't see why they'd want to be "husband and husband" or "wife and wife". It's so absurd it's laughable. Give them the same rights and status as a married couple but FFS call it something else. (Something that does not involve "husband and husband".) Why do people so willingly choose to get on the losing side of losing issues? It's like ANWR... gimme a break it's gonna happen. Maybe not today but it's going to happen as surely as the sun is going to set.

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» RE: I now pronounce you... Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: I now pronounce you... Posted by: HeroesAll
» ONO teh fagots!!1!1!!! Posted by: Allison
» RE: I now pronounce you... Posted by: Taurus
» RE: I now pronounce you... Posted by: mstenger
Perhaps Wheel of Fortune is a better outlet for you?
Posted by: lamar on Jun 12, 2006 4:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
CryOfan, why do you write like a freshman sociology major? I have to be somewhat offensive, because I think it will make you a better writer in the long run. Your posts might impress a high schooler, but anybody past undergrad sees it for what it is: big words hiding small ideas. Think of it this way: if you can't communicate an idea powerfully using simple terms, the idea just isn't that powerful. Big words are like bling.

I find it infinitely amusing that you cite to Occam's Razor, yet you use complicated words when simple ones will do. Sort of defeats Occam's point, huh? Also, you throw around the word "overclass" like it has a fixed meaning. This is hardly the hallmark of simplicity in logic.

Well, I hope you don't get banned. Alternet could use a decent right-winger masquerading as a "radical leftist" who just happens to not have any ideas . . . a Devil's advocate sort of thing.

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» ABsolutely lamar Posted by: Suburban Dad
Good piece, Mr. Holland - no irony intended.
Posted by: kenhymes on Jun 12, 2006 6:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have picked on Mr. Holland a lot for what I have seen as falling for the bait dangled by the far-right "Christians" (I happen to be a dedicated Jesus freak with left politics myself, it's my faith, my job, my family all rolled into one.) I don't think it's useful for the left to get worked up everytime a self-appointed spokesperson for God says something ignorant and hateful.

But I must disagree with those posters who call this issue a distraction. Equal rights for gays and lesbians is not a fringe issue. It is something that affects most families in one way or another, and affects everything for gays, especially those who are living defensive lives in small towns and the country, without the benefit of active, supportive gay communities.

Sidenote: As a Christian, I am constantly reminding churchgoers who express anti-gay views that according to the Gospels, Jesus says nothing about homosexuality, but does specifically reject divorce. For myself, I don't worship a book, I follow the Holy Spirit. And there is a complicated history surrounding the inclusion of anti-homosexual statements in the New Testament letters attributed to Paul (the short version is that Luke inserted these views and other passages supporting slavery and female submission in order to placate the Romans). As far as the OT passages are concerned, well... we don't stone our children to death for disobedience, and we don't invite a coterie of priests into our homes every time we need to get rid of mildew. Clearly, for even the most "literalist" Christian, the ancient tribal laws of Judea are anything but universally binding.

But regardless of religious belief, for all Americans, this is anything but a trivial distraction. It gets to the heart of our Constitutional democracy. We are not, and have never been, and never will be, a Christian nation. There is no such thing, it's an oxymoron. (I won't get into why this notion is so... anti-Christian... read the Gospels and Paul's letters, and you'll find out for yourself).

Either the laws and Constitutional protections we live under apply equally to all, or they are meaningless. To those who argue that allowing gay marriage will lead to polygamy, I say... and? your point is? If multiple women want to marry the same man (or vice versa), as long as they are not coerced or subsequently abused (not clear in many cases in Utah), then what compelling interest or legal principle does it serve to prevent them? When it is said that people will marry animals... well, that's just silly. Anyway, there are laws in place to prevent sexual abuse of animals, so it's a moot point.

Sorry, I ramble a bit. But I wanted to be sure and appreciate Holland's piece, and share my point of view as a Christian, since I had been pretty critical of some of his work.

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from now on, I just talk BLING to ya
Posted by: cry0fan on Jun 13, 2006 8:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...'stead of big words, cuz if big words is bling, then bling must be big words!

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The New Homophobes
Posted by: ronavila on Jun 14, 2006 6:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No longer called immoral or disgusting by the new homophobes, we are merely inconsequential, not important enough to warrant consideration.

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