Annie
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- Nov 22, 2003
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Kathianne said:
freeandfun1 said:Same link I posted. I think the author of the initial story "added" a little to make the story appear to be more than it is.
Without a fundamental right at stake, Birch wrote, only the people of Alabama could decide "that a prohibition of sex toys is misguided, or ineffective, or just plain silly ... ."
DKSuddeth said:I believe that this - Amendment IX - Rights Retained by the People
The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. - proves me right. The right to privacy was created by the people, not the courts, not the government, but by the people. We are not a nation with limits imposed by the government....at least we are not supposed to be.
freeandfun1 said:Without a fundamental right at stake
Please educate me you constitutionalists..... what are fundamental rights?
freeandfun1 said:Time and time again the courts have ruled that only in certain circumstances is the right to privacy protected by the constitution. the same judges that rule that you have a right to privacy when it comes to sex in your home, will say you don't have a right to privacy when it comes to smoking or many other things in your home. The courts are getting out of control.
DKSuddeth said:Then why make this statement? A federal appeals court Wednesday upheld a 1998 Alabama law banning the sale of sex toys in the state, ruling the Constitution doesn't include a right to sexual privacy.
DKSuddeth said:through all of the issues and rulings, we're letting the government become the rulers, not the people ruling the government. we're losing our republic this way.
DKSuddeth said:No, thats completely wrong. The constitution does NOT provide limits to the people, it provides limits to the government. Any right not expressly forbidden in the constitution is automatically granted, not the other way around. The court screwed up.
freeandfun1 said:Where do "personal privacy rights" stop? I should then be able to do anything in my home that I want. Anything - as long as I keep it "private".
The law is not banning the use, only the sale. I still don't see how not striking down the ban on the sale of the items violates "personal rights". As Merlin pointed out, there are a lot of communities that ban the sales of various items. Alabama is a state correct? So the state is the community. If the law was passed, by the people, in a legal manner, then repealing it would violate the rights of the community. It is up to the community to repeal the law. Not the courts.
freeandfun1 said:I am betting that the statement ". . . . ruling the Constitution doesn't include a right to sexual privacy" is being inserted by the author of the article.