To:
ElRushbo@eibnet.com http://www.nationalcenter.org/P21NVGreenMarriage90712.html
>
> How do we know that? States can deny marriage licenses for various reasons,
such as hereditary diseases.If marriage were a right, no license or state
approval would be necessary, just as no state approval is necessary to vote or
get a job or have children or buy an automobile.
Some possible reasons for denial:
http://www.obermayerfamilymatters.com/2014/02/a-license-to-wed-can-you-be-denied
-a-marriage-license/
. Those claiming that it’s not a right as a means of justifying the withholding of marriage from same sex couples keep repeating the same inane talking points. In doing so they do not provide any documentation to support their view, and they do not provide any sound logical, legal or philosophical argument. In addition, they have not responded directly to anything that I have presented. Therefor I will try again.
I maintain that marriage is a right. Call it a natural right, a human right, or a fundamental right-it matters little. Natural rights are closely associated with human rights –those rights that we enjoy simply by virtue of being human. Rights that cannot be given or taken away by government. Rights are bestowed upon us at birth. So is marriage a human or natural right? There are some who say that since it is sanctioned by government, in that sense it’s not. However, marriage is an ancient institution that predates recorded history and government as we know it, so we can also say that government did not create marriage but simply imposed itself on it and regulated it.
In addition, fourteen times since 1888, the United States Supreme Court has stated that marriage is a fundamental right of all individuals
http://www.afer.org/blog/14-supreme-court-cases-marriage-is-a-fundamental-right/
Furthermore The Legal Information Institute states”Fundamental rights are a group of rights that have been recognized by the Supreme Court as requiring a high degree of protection from government encroachment. These rights are specifically identified in the Constitution (especially in the
Bill of Rights), or have been found under
Due Process. Laws limiting these rights generally must pass
strict scrutiny to be upheld as constitutional. Examples of fundamental rights not specifically listed in the Constitution include the right to
marry and the right to privacy, which includes a right to contraception and the right to interstate travel”
http://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/fundamental_right
Most rights that people enjoy and take for granted in this country, are not specified in the constitution but are
legal rights and presumed to be constitutional unless challanged. The time is not far off when the right to same sex marriage will be established by SCOTUS and gay marriage as a legal right will soon follow
As of this writing, 36 states and Washington DC have said that same sex marriage is a legal right and by the time you blink again there are likely to be more. And while the SCOTUS stopped just short of saying that it’s a legal right, they did say that legally married same sex couples have a right federal benefits. The fact that marriage for gays is not yet a legal right in all jurisdictions is merely a function of the fact that the law is imperfect and not always fair. Because it’s imperfect we must continue to strive to improve it.
Still not convinced? Let me ask this….If it’s not a right, what is it? The only possible answer is “privilege” What is a privilege? It’s something that you have to earn. Driving is a privilege. You have to study the rules and take a road test. You do not have to study and take a test to qualify for a marriage license. While both rights and privileges can be forfeited under certain circumstances-commit a crime and lose right to freedom/drive badly and lose your driving privileges-they are by no means the same thing, because the bar, for taking away a right, is set much higher. In addition, as we established above, rights emanate from the fact of being born a human. Privileges do not. We can only conclude that marriage is not a privilege and therefore is a right. When a ten your old asks if she can get married someday, her parent can say “sure” ….unless she means her girlfriend, and then, if she lives in the wrong place she will have to be told “maybe” and it will hurt