LGBT
Related: About this forumOklahoma Attorney General: The 14th Amendment Doesn't Apply To Gay People
I have a dream that some day whether or not you are considered to be a "person" in the context of the 14th Amendment will be determined by the color of your skin.
http://www.krmg.com/news/news/local/oklahoma-attorney-general-says-law-clear-same-sex-/ncp64/
He says, Is there really a Constitutional right? Is there cases that support that individuals sexual orientation should be the heart of equal protection under the 14th Amendment? And thats just not the case.
Pruitt says courts have previously ruled that the 14th amendment wasn't written for gays and lesbians, but rather to protect people from discrimination based on characteristics of race or gender, not behavior.
When you look at where the Equal Protection Law came from, the 14th Amendment, the right to be treated equally under the laws, it came after the Civil War.
Plus, Pruitt says the decision is up to the states and the U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled that way in other gay marriage cases.
NCLefty
(3,678 posts)"Courts have previously ruled" is his way of saying it should never change (conservative, ayup), and how we know he wouldn't have stood up for women when it was being debated for them either.
Gender had nothing to do with the amendment at its inception, and only much later came to be a part of it:
The reference to "male inhabitants" in Section 2 was the first reference to gender in the Constitution, and was condemned by women's suffragists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony who had long seen their cause as linked to that of black rights. The separation of black civil rights from women's civil rights split the two movements for decades.[20]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
He must have been appointed for his religious views, not his professional qualifications.
Fearless
(18,421 posts)Gay couples should receive equal recognition by the federal, state, and local governments because of this. It's really quite simple.