I'm so tired of hearing about the will of the people. You
can't put the discrimination of a minority up to a vote of the majority. That's
fundamentally flawed.
I know the majority of people are not gay. I know the
majority of the people probably even think that being gay is wrong. What the
majority of the people want is not the point. Yet the good Reverend Louis P.
Sheldon, the right-wing fundamentalist Christian zealot, uses just such a
flawed argument. In comments regarding Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's veto of
AB 849, the bill passed by the California
Legislature that would have provided equal rights and protections to all of the
citizens of the State of California, Sheldon said, " . . . the people already spoke on marriage. 4.6 million
Californians can�t be wrong when it comes to marriage . . .",
I will attempt to educate Reverend Sheldon and his flock of
uneducated followers on the Constitution of the
United States. I will try to keep it as simple as possible out of respect
for the very real possibility that Lou Sheldon and his follower's obvious lack
of education could be the result of a lack of intelligence.
Proposition
22 was passed by the voters in California in the 2000 election and limits
marriage only to opposite sex couples. Benjamin Lopez, Reverend Sheldon's
California lobbyist, proudly proclaims, " . . . 4.6 million
Californians who voted for Prop 22 can�t be ignored simply to appease a small
liberal minority." Well, yes they can, Mr. Lopez, but only if
we strictly adhere to the Constitution and the original intent of the Founding
Fathers as Lou Sheldon, et al, claim to want.
If people are going to discriminate in life, they are also
going to discriminate at the ballot box. We don't put up to a vote whether or
not to let the Ku Klux Klan conduct a rally. We all know how that would turn
out�it would end up being illegal. But that's free speech which is guaranteed
by the very first amendment
to the Constitution and it's already been decided by the courts. We let them
rally because it is their right to do so.
As an example of how this reasoning is fundamentally flawed,
suppose you and I are in a room of 100 fellow employees of which 90-plus are
fundamentalist Christians and fewer than 10 are gay. We are there to decide
whether or not gays should be allowed to work at our company. We argue for
awhile and nobody's mind is changed. The 90-plus fundamentalist Christians
don't think we should allow gays to work at our company and the four or five
gay people think it's okay, so we decide to do the 'democratic' thing. We're
going to put it up to a vote! Why bother. We all know how that would turn out.
The Founding Fathers knew this. That's why they set us up
with an independent judiciary that is not accountable to the people. The
Founding Fathers remembered clearly the bigotry and intolerance of the Puritans
(the Lou Sheldon-type conservative fundamentalist Christians of their day) and
wanted some protection for minorities as Harvey Wasserman points out in an Online
Journal article:
"One major reason Benjamin Franklin, George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Tom Paine, Ethan Allen and the vast majority of
early Americans rejected the merger of church and state was the lingering
stench of Puritan intolerance. The infamous theocratic murders of the Salem
witch trials sickened the American soul . . ."
The Constitution of the United States was written to provide
protection for minorities and the Constitution of the United States was written
to provide protection form religious zealots like Lou Sheldon and an
independent judiciary was established to see that the Constitution was adhered
to. This was the specific intent of the people who wrote the Constitution. Lou
Sheldon and his fellow fundamentalist Christians, the Puritans of our day, want
the judiciary to be accountable to the people who would discriminate. Otherwise
he and his followers consider them renegade and activist. Where were these guys
educated? Were they even educated? We want judges deciding what's right and
what's wrong. We do not want judges doing what the majority of the people want.
Lou Sheldon doesn't even want that; he's just not intelligent enough to realize
it.
Mel Seesholtz, Ph.D.,
a professor of English at Pennsylvania State University, correctly points out
in an article
for Online Journal:
"The point had been clearly made by a 1968
Gallup poll that showed a whopping 72 percent of Americans opposed interracial
marriage a year after the Supreme Court legalized it (Loving v.
Virginia). A �popularity vote� in 1968 would have delayed interracial
marriage equality for years. A "popularity vote" on codifying racial
segregation in some Southern states�and probably a few others�in 1950 would
almost certainly have delayed African Americans� civil rights for years if not
decades."
The fourteenth amendment of the
Constitution says that I can't be deprived of liberties without due process
of law. Liberty means that I have the right to conduct my life as I see fit
even though many people think what I'm doing is wrong. This is true even if the
majority of people think what I'm doing is wrong. In fact, this is true even if
every person thinks what I'm doing is wrong. Unless, of course, what I'm doing
infringes upon someone else's rights. That's the due process part. If judges
decide that what I do does not infringe upon any other person's rights, then I
have the right to do it. That's the end of it. We don't then put it up to a
vote.
Just because some people or even many people think that
something is wrong is not a good enough reason to make it illegal. Remember due
process. A judge would have to decide that it infringes on someone else's
rights or that there is some other legitimate state interest in making it
illegal. To make something illegal just because some people may think it's
wrong begs the question, "wrong according to whom?" To make something
illegal just because the majority of the people are Christian and Christian
teaching tells them that it's wrong is making a law respecting the
establishment of a religion. That is clearly unconstitutional under the first amendment to the
Constitution. It's the very first item in the Bill of Rights! It's
unconstitutional to make something illegal just because some religion teaches
that it's wrong.
So what's the answer for Lou Sheldon and his puritanical fundamentalist
Christian followers? They want to change the Constitution! Yes, the very same
people who want 'strict constitutionalists' who will adhere to the original
intent of the Founding Fathers as judges want to change the Constitution to
discriminate against a minority. Lou Sheldon and his fundamentalist Christian
followers want to change the constitution to discriminate against the people
the Founding Fathers set up our form of government to protect.
At least one state, Massachusetts, has already decided that
it's okay for gays to get married. The fundamentalist Christian is very afraid
that these marriages will become recognized by other states. Well, guess what,
the Full Faith and Credit clause of the Constitution
says that is exactly what other states are supposed to do. This is not an
amendment to the Constitution. This is actually part of the Constitution
itself. Once again the answer for Lou Sheldon and the fundamentalist Christian
is to change the Constitution.
Here's a news flash for Lou Sheldon and the right-wing
conservative fundamentalist Christians of this country, the Constitution of the
United States is a liberal document. The Constitution of the United States is
designed to protect the very people that Lou Sheldon and the right-wing
conservative fundamentalist Christians would have thrown in jail or eliminated
from the face of the Earth all together.
So who is the activist? Who is it that wants to change the
meaning of the Constitution or, indeed, to change the Constitution itself? Who
are the renegades who want to deviate from the original intent of the Founding
Fathers? Why, it�s Lou Sheldon and the right-wing conservative fundamentalist
Christians. The fundamentalist Christians rail against those who seek to change
the meaning of the Constitution and yet it is they who want to not only change
the meaning but to actually change the Constitution itself.
The Family Research Counsel, another conservative
fundamentalist Christian group led by the narrow minded Tony Perkins, recently
put the definition of a bigot in an article on their web site
denouncing the passage of a hate crimes bill that includes gays:
"A bigot is one who is strongly partial to one's own group,
religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ believing
they, as a group, deserve special treatment above and beyond everyone else. If
you ask most Members of the House of Representatives what they thought of
bigotry they would rightfully condemn the act, which makes it inexplicable that
223 Members of Congress would vote last night to make a new tier of hate
crimes�one for homosexuals, with harsher penalties, and another for everyone
else."
Leaving aside the fact that " . . . believing they, as
a group, deserve special treatment . . ." is not part of the definition of
a bigot and, thus, bigotry had nothing to do with the passage of the bill, this
definition fits Tony Perkins, Lou Sheldon and the fundamentalist Christians to
a tee. The definition is simply, "one who is strongly partial to one's own
group, religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ."
I actually admire the fundamentalist Christians for having
strongly held beliefs. It is their right and I actually think it's good. It's
the intolerance part that I have a problem with and who is more intolerant than
fundamentalist Christians? This is especially true with respect to their
attitudes regarding gays.
I
don't know how these facts could escape Lou Sheldon, Tony Perkins and their
followers. They put the definition of a bigot on their web site which they
denounce but which fits them to a tee. They denounce people who they claim want
to change the meaning of the Constitution as renegades and activists while it
is they who want to actually change the Constitution. They say they want to
adhere to the original intent of the Founding Fathers but they want to change
what the Founding Fathers wrote to suit their purposes. They want to eliminate
the minority protections the Founding Fathers took great pains to provide us
with and they want to codify religious dogma which is clearly unconstitutional.
I can't decide if they are hypocrites or terribly undereducated or just plain
stupid. I suspect a lot of all three.