One side of this thread is like all the worst people in America having a huge collective anxiety attack. I confess to enjoying watching the spectacle, as unhinged as it is.
Really?
One side of this thread is like all the worst people in America having a huge collective anxiety attack. I confess to enjoying watching the spectacle, as unhinged as it is.
Fortunately Stripe, the US Supreme Court is not subject to your particular deity's laws. Its job is to interpret the Constitution of the United States and the various and sundry laws and regulations passed by the Federal and state governments.Your logic is appalling.
The word marriage has a meaning set by the authority of God. According to His "system of laws," your supreme court has perverted the law. Therefore, its ruling is no law.
Your court is subject to His standards.
The Bible makes it clear: Marriage can only be between a man and a woman. That does not mean I want a code of law that is strictly Biblical. The Bible does not comment upon plenty of things that might reasonably be laws.
In a discussion of the law, we need to agree on what the law is. I have given my definition. You think men who make rulings — whatever they might be — defines what is law.
Your court has perverted God's standards, therefore its ruling is no law.
There oughta be a law:God has standards. Anything that goes against those standards can never be law.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said we should just do away with the Supreme Court altogether. So much for that Constitution they've been bandying about for the last decade or so.
Only if your assertion that He does not exist is true.Fortunately Stripe, the US Supreme Court is not subject to your particular deity's laws.
I know.Its job is to interpret the Constitution of the United States and the various and sundry laws and regulations passed by the Federal and state governments.
You should read what I wrote instead of making things up.On one hand you want to agree with what the law is, you claim you provided a definition and then you complain that other people seem define the law. Are you therefore the sole arbiter of the law? Are you that learned?
Nope.The law in this country begins with the Constitution.
I have no problem with laws changing.Sorry if you don't like that.
There oughta be a law: "neither shall a garment mingled of linen and woollen come upon thee." Lev 19:19 KJV. I need to check my closet.
That's your belief. The topic here isn't that.The law does not bow to beliefs.
Then you're out of the conversation, because that's literally all you've offered, repeatedly insisting that it is the control here. It simply isn't and I've answered on that sufficiently to set out the why prior.What we believe is not relevant.
Really?
One side of this thread is like all the worst people in America having a huge collective anxiety attack. I confess to enjoying watching the spectacle, as unhinged as it is.
When push comes to shove their hatred for this country is extremely difficult for them to hide.
Or maybe that's a little much. I mean they had no problem with Citizens United or the Hobby Lobby decision. Basically, when they get their way, they don't complain. When the Supreme Court decides against them, they have a conniption fit.
When push comes to shove their hatred for this country is extremely difficult for them to hide.
Or maybe that's a little much. I mean they had no problem with Citizens United or the Hobby Lobby decision. Basically, when they get their way, they don't complain. When the Supreme Court decides against them, they have a conniption fit.
Maybe we do not like to be forced into disobeying our conscience. Hobby Lobby was allowed to make policy according to the owners sincerely held beliefs.
No one is being made to shop there.
Evidently you would prefer that they were coerced into conformity to your agenda. This is a peculiar position for a libertarian.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said we should just do away with the Supreme Court altogether. So much for that Constitution they've been bandying about for the last decade or so.
Homo marriage does not exist.If you don't like Gay Marriage, don't get gay married.
Oh? How have you "found" that?I have found MOST rabid opponents of homosexuals are insecure about their own sexuality.
Who are you to teach on what Jesus said?If Jesus said we are all sinners, then who are sinners to judge sinners.
And you're going to hound everyone until they do, right?If you can keep your nose out of other people's business then all the better.
Wait. I say the law does not bow to beliefs and then you claim I think the opposite?That's your belief.
You speak in pronouns such that nobody has the foggiest clue what you are taking about.The topic here isn't that.
Nope. God and His word are not dependent on our beliefs. He is independent reality.Then you're out of the conversation, because that's literally all you've offered, repeatedly insisting that it is the control here. It simply isn't and I've answered on that sufficiently to set out the why prior.
The Constitution does not give the court the power to exceed the limits of the constitution itself
Granite;4368800]People trot out "sincerely" as though it gives them a pass for being sincerely wrong.
Quite true, but if Hobby Lobby's asinine ignoramus-endorsed policies continue it could be said that they are forcing people to make choices they wouldn't otherwise. Same thing with these idiot pharmacists who've decided they get to tell people what kind of birth control they can and can't get.
If a person's belief is sincere it means they really hold it and that they are not being deceitful.
What are they supposed to do trot out a belief they don't agree with to keep the peace? By "wrong" you just mean that their view disagrees with yours. If you are really such a tolerant liberal why is that so hard for you to tolerate?
Individuals just should not have so much freedom, should they.
What you would like I imagine is to force all the ignoramuses to follow your views and violate their own conscience.
Now Ted Cruz is proposing we look at electing members of the Supreme Court and mused about impeaching five members because he didn't get his way.
Is there anything about America these people actually like?
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/420409/ted-cruz-supreme-court-constitutional-amendment
The court exceeded its authority by a long shot and conjured "law" out of thin air.
It is drunk with power and you want to hide this from criticism under an American flag, as if to question them is to rebel against the country.
To think logically we have to think reversibly so let's consider how it would be in some hypothetical future if, by some political movement we should one day end up with an activist conservative Court.
Assuming that the court has broad sweeping powers and can overthrow all pre-existing law without precedent let us imagine it overthrowing the current statute establishing gay marriage.
Would this not be equally an expression of their rightful authority?
Would you be waving the flag and asking people to accept their ruling in that case?