Basic standards of fairness and justice

California has taken to the courts to fight a battle that is likely to be waged in New Jersey in the state Legislature perhaps as soon as this year. At issue is whether California’s domestic partnership law confers second-class citizenship on same-sex couples — a contention made by New Jersey’s gay and lesbian community and a panel authorized to review the Garden State’s civil union law.

The California high court ruled in 2004 that San Francisco could not issue marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples because the state banned same-sex marriages. But it did not rule on the constitutionality of the state ban itself.

That’s where the current fight comes in, according to The New York Times. California’s

state ban on same-sex marriage is based on a law enacted by the Legislature in 1977 and a statewide initiative approved by the voters in 2000 that defined marriage as being only between a man and a woman. The question before the court is whether those laws violate provisions of the state Constitution protecting equality and fundamental rights.

A central argument being offered by supporters of same-sex marriage is that the use of different terminology creates separate classes of citizens.

“Domestic partnership and marriage are not equal,” Ms. Stewart said. “Words matter. Names matter.”

The Supreme Court here was the first state high court to strike down a law barring interracial marriage, in a 1948 decision called Perez v. Sharp. The United States Supreme Court did not follow suit until 1967.

Ms. Stewart asked whether giving interracial couples the same rights under a different name — “say we called it transracial unions instead of marriage,” she said — would have satisfied the state Constitution in 1948.

Several of the justices seemed receptive to the analogy. Chief Justice Ronald M. George, seen by many here as the swing vote on a closely divided court, paused three times during the argument to quote from the Perez decision.

“The essence of the right to marry is freedom to join in marriage with the person of one’s choice,” Chief Justice George said at one point, quoting a passage from the Perez decision by Justice Roger J. Traynor, who would go on to become chief justice of the court.

The state’s argument essentially boils down to “take it slow; society isn’t quite ready.” (The arguments of the anti-gay groups are based on fear and loathing and do not warrant a response.)

The state maybe right about society, but that’s not a good enough reason to maintain separate classes of couples. If fails the basic standards of fairness and justice.

There is another aspect to this that needs to be raised, perhaps legally, and that is a First Amendment challenge. Marriage, as it is presently constructed, is based on a religious right. Allowing religion to dictate the law seems a violation of the separation clause, a violation of same-sex couples’ rights to come together and be recognized by the state.

The real answer is to remove the word marriage from the statute book altogether and leave that to the religious realm and individual choice. Let the law structure the rights of couples, regardless of whether they are man and woman, man and man or woman and woman.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

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Author: hankkalet

Hank Kalet is a poet and freelance journalist. He is the economic needs reporter for NJ Spotlight, teaches journalism at Rutgers University and writing at Middlesex County College and Brookdale Community College. He writes a semi-monthly column for the Progressive Populist. He is a lifelong fan of the New York Mets and New York Knicks, drinks too much coffee and attends as many Bruce Springsteen concerts as his meager finances will allow. He lives in South Brunswick with his wife Annie.

One thought on “Basic standards of fairness and justice”

  1. Well, well, we are getting closer. Maybe we can make a libertarian out of you yet!>The real answer is to remove the >word marriage from the statute book >altogether and leave that to the >religious realm and individual >choice. Well, we clearly agree here. The gooferment has no role in how free individuals choose to associate.>Let the law structure the rights >of couplesBut here\’s where you go off track. \”Couples\” don\’t have rights. Sovereign individuals do. There is no need for the gooferment to go off \”inventing\” rights. Just stand off to the side and protect the rights of individuals. You see when the gooferment get involved making \”tax law\”, \”health care law\”, \”rental law\”, or any other such stuff, it inserts its force. That\’s the corrosive. It\’s the initiation of force that hurts society. We have enough problems with Washinton, Trenton, and every other two-bit power made politician who all have \”great ideas\” how others should live.We need a lot more \”Separations of Government and XXXX\”. Where XXXX can be any number of things.You\’ll come to see that government only has one real role — the prevention of the initiation of force on a Sovereign Individual. When you see that force, or fraud, then and only then does government have a role. Beyond that very clearly defined and small role, it morphs into the gooferment and mucks stuff up.It\’s really humorous that \”marriage licenses\” was a racial thing. And, the gooferment used it to insert itself into tax policy, and a host of other areas. If \”we\” have been smart enough to keep it in its Constitutional \”box\”, we wouldn\’t have this problem now!

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