The Iowa Supreme Court's unanimous ruling on their same-sex marriage case just came out. (Thanks to
tacithydra for pointing me at it.)
ETA: Of course, while I was reading it and writing this post, it's been mentioned a whole bunch of times on my flist. With, unsurprisingly, much joy.
There are some really good bits; I'm only going to quote a few of them, but the whole thing merits reading; it's written clearly enough for a lay audience.
This ruling really takes on all the anti-SSM arguments like that; I can see this being more influential in the long term than Goodridge.
ETA: Of course, while I was reading it and writing this post, it's been mentioned a whole bunch of times on my flist. With, unsurprisingly, much joy.
There are some really good bits; I'm only going to quote a few of them, but the whole thing merits reading; it's written clearly enough for a lay audience.
A specific tradition sought to be maintained cannot be an important governmental objective for equal protection purposes, however, when the tradition is nothing more than the historical classification currently expressed in the statute being challenged. When a certain tradition is used as both the governmental objective and the classification to further that objective, the equal protection analysis is transformed into the circular question of whether the classification accomplishes the governmental objective, which objective is to maintain the classification.and
We begin with the County’s argument that the goal of the same-sex marriage ban is to ensure children will be raised only in the optimal milieu. In pursuit of this objective, the statutory exclusion of gay and lesbian people is both under-inclusive and over-inclusive. The civil marriage statute is under-inclusive because it does not exclude from marriage other groups of parents—such as child abusers, sexual predators, parents neglecting to provide child support, and violent felons—that are undeniably less than optimal parents. Such under-inclusion tends to demonstrate that the sexual-orientation-based classification is grounded in prejudice or “overbroad generalizations about the different talents, capacities, or preferences” of gay and lesbian people, rather than having a substantial relationship to some important objective.and
Gay and lesbian persons are capable of procreation. Thus, the sole conceivable avenue by which exclusion of gay and lesbian people from civil marriage could promote more procreation is if the unavailability of civil marriage for same-sex partners caused homosexual individuals to “become” heterosexual in order to procreate within the present traditional institution of civil marriage. The briefs, the record, our research, and common sense do not suggest such an outcome.and
Indeed, under the County’s logic, more state resources would be conserved by excluding groups more numerous than Iowa’s estimated 5800 same-sex couples (for example, persons marrying for a second or subsequent time).It's not quite as snarky as some judicial writing I've seen (like the one requiring two attorneys to play rock-paper-scissors to determine a hearing location IIRC) but there's definitely a taste of "WTF! Did you think that argument actually works?" at times.
This ruling really takes on all the anti-SSM arguments like that; I can see this being more influential in the long term than Goodridge.
no subject
Date: 2009-04-03 18:19 (UTC)