Thursday, May 15, 2008

Your Old Road is Rapidly Aging


Perhaps today you felt a tug and a tear somewhere not quite inside but clearly within you. At first it was a subtle and ineffable drift. Some part of your being was drawn sensibly but invisibly away. Eventually, you stifled a whimper as something was pulled from your core- as if your awareness of your self- the you that is inside your hands but is not your hands- the you that draws you beyond the horizon of you- was gently but surely gripped and coerced from your soles, from your chest, your arms, your face. And finally like a breath that would not return or as if sight were reversed, it emptied your being with a final tear as delicate as it was painful.

But rather than empty and unaware, you are left with a heavy oblivion that can not carry itself.

You are your phantom limb.

Why did this happen?

Because, today, California's Supreme Court destroyed marriage.

While this may be a day of unspeakable joy for some, for others it's a sign of the apocalypse... mostly those who believe in an apocalypse.

Remember when I wrote this? Really? Don't you have anything else to do?

Anyway, the decision is in. The question was: "The question we must address is [I just said that] whether, under these circumstances, the failure to designate the official relationship of same-sex couples as marriage violates the California Constitution."

The decision is: "... upon review of the numerous California decisions that have examined the underlying bases and significance of the constitutional right to marry (and that illuminate why this right has been recognized as one of the basic, inalienable civil rights guaranteed to an individual by the California Constitution), we conclude that, under this state’s Constitution, the constitutionally based right to marry properly must be understood to encompass the core set of basic substantive legal rights and attributes traditionally associated with marriage that are so integral to an individual’s liberty and personal autonomy that they may not be eliminated or abrogated by the Legislature or by the electorate through the statutory initiative process. These core substantive rights include, most fundamentally, the opportunity of an individual to establish — with the person with whom the individual has chosen to share his or her life — an officially recognized and protected family possessing mutual rights and responsibilities and entitled to the same respect and dignity accorded a union traditionally designated as marriage. As past cases establish, the substantive right of two adults who share a loving relationship to join together to establish an officially recognized family of their own — and, if the couple chooses, to raise children within that family — constitutes a vitally important attribute of the fundamental interest in liberty and personal autonomy that the California Constitution secures to all persons for the benefit of both the individual and society.
Furthermore, in contrast to earlier times, our state now recognizes that an individual’s capacity to establish a loving and long-term committed relationship with another person and responsibly to care for and raise children does not depend upon the individual’s sexual orientation, and, more generally, that an individual’s sexual orientation — like a person’s race or gender— does not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal rights. We therefore conclude that in view of the substance and significance of the fundamental constitutional right to form a family relationship, the California Constitution properly must be interpreted to guarantee this basic civil right to all Californians, whether gay or heterosexual, and to same-sex couples as well as to opposite-sex couples."

If you're not afraid of catching The Gay, you can download all 172 pages of the decision here.

Now before your inbox is filled with all manner of alerts and battle cries (read: requests for money), realize this is not judicial activism- though that dog whistle will be blown. This is, understand clearly, a plain, conservative reading of the state constitution and legal precedent. It is not a decision based on what the Republican appointed judges think policy ought to be because of personal preference or inclination. It is not a twisting of definitions to suit their own agenda. It is based on what they understand to be the rights guaranteed and protected by our constitution. So, disagree with it if you must, but don't disagree with it as a dummy.

That said, I can understand if you feel that, today, the very foundations of being have been destroyed. How will we go on? How will my marriage survive? How will I not be forced to marry my shoes? How will the way we say things ought to be remain if we don't believe in them real hard and force others to do the same?

Coincidentally, providentially, serendipitously, by cosmic accident- whatever your sensibilities allow- this week I had to find my and the Qweenbean's marriage license to verify to an insurance company we were married and it got me a'thinkin'. It's a strange thing that the state has any business in saying that we are allowed to have the type of relationship we have agreed to try out. She said it's a good thing there is because I would have married my cat to make a point. Whether that's the case, I think that will be an out for some churches. Marrying cats? No, I mean after they've exhausted themselves with initiatives that will ultimately prove unconstitutional, churches will have to decide if they want to continue being agents of the state- more concerned with producing good citizens than people who have no place to lay their heads.

To me this is a good thing, not least of all because all of this head resting has made for lazy brains.

3 comments:

Robin M. said...

Oh man, I should have written a post about this yesterday too!

I think marriage law is one of the few remaining unfortunate and largely unrecognized entanglements of church and state. I think it's true that in Mexico and Canada, and probably most other civilized countries, church weddings and state-sanctioned marriages are already separate functions. I think things would be much simpler if the government upheld equal rights, and churches could make their own decisions about who to marry or not.

Joliene said...

I am an advocate for gay marriage, if only because our country operates in the way it currently does. I would much prefer to see the government offer only civil unions and let the religious institutions handle whatever they would like to consider marriage.

When we think of marriage, we think of the things that come out of marriage-- raising children, buyng a home, handling deaths within families, buying cars/boats/cell phone plans/whatevers. I should be allowed to choose whichever "life partner" I'd like to contribute to my family. If I want to raise my children and buy my cell phone with another woman, it will not have any more of a detrimental affect on the child than it will on the cell phone.

Everyone knows that they haven't control over who they love. I can't help being straight or loving some of the assholes I've loved anymore than my gay friends can help loving the men/women they love and have loved. And they should be allowed to express that as freely as I.

Skybalon said...

It's a tough row to hoe, but we already, always redefine marriage. It seems a part of getting married to do so.

This is one those perfect examples of unfortunate church-state entanglements. The point that our Constitutions protect and guarantee certain rights, liberties, and arrangements is essential to this and is the central state concern here (and why some Californians are going to try to amend our constitution). Those state arrangements are not a part of church arrangements. The problem seems to be that they are in fact a part of our church arrangements. (I know, I know, I just said the opposite.) We, in the west, as good enlightenment borne religious folks, know that the state preserves our religious freedom. Some of us go so far as to think something like- "Just as Jesus died for my spiritual freedom- so and so that died in war, died for my physical freedom". We will happily temper our spiritual/religious expression for the sake of getting along. For the sake of being allowed to exist as religious folks, we allow the state to control our religious lives so that religious life becomes something palatable and supportive to the state. Religious expression, for it to be acceptable religious expression, must be mild. It is best when it is that which creates good, obedient, submissive, and docile subjects. I mean as far as the state is concerned. "Legitimate" power cannot allow that which is subversive or challenges legitimacy to remain. It will seek to do something like crucify it every time.

As much as I might disagree with certain radical religious expressions, I have to affirm them as radical religious expressions. It is the purview and function of religious expression to be crazy and contrarian. My sense is that because it is crazy and ephemeral it must be wary of domination and coercion; it ought to err on the side of openness rather than "closed-ness" and that's where I would take issue with so much of our ideological religious hammering.

I don't think this offers a solution- I would say it only clarifies the issue. Whether we are a part of some people who allows or opposes, understands or confuses, addresses or cannot comprehend different ideas of marriage depends on whether we are a part of some people who allows or opposes, understands or confuses, addresses or cannot comprehend different ideas of marriage. And that (if I may dig my own grave) is a matter of preference.

That said, I can think of any number of pairings of people that I would say should have neither children nor cell phones, but in any of them I would always be more concerned about the children than I would a cell phone.