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Business and professions will suffer if same-sex marriage arrives
MercatorNet ^ | June 24, 2015 | J. Mark Brewer

Posted on 06/28/2015 2:26:44 AM PDT by No One Special

I was a law student when I first learned of the consequences of not being politically correct concerning homosexuality. A former Miss America’s contract as the citrus growers’ brand-ambassador was allowed to lapse because she had successfully campaigned for the repeal of a pro-homosexual ordinance in Miami-Dade County. She was quoted as saying, “What these people really want, hidden behind obscure legal phrases, is the legal right to propose to our children that theirs is an acceptable, alternate way of life.” She was publicly humiliated -- "pied" on national television -- and her name -- Anita Bryant -- became synonymous with something called "homophobia" and "hate speech."

As a new Air Force judge advocate officer, my first court assignment was to represent the United States in an administrative discharge proceeding concerning a female service member. She was being kicked out of the service for allegedly engaging in homosexual acts. Even as an inexperienced young lawyer, I managed to prove that she had committed the requisite two homosexual acts. She was given a “general” discharge and sent back to the United States.

I don’t remember when thereafter I first noticed that there are only two instances in which “sex” occurs in the “ethics” rules for lawyers. Both are in the same, “anti-discrimination” provision: “A lawyer shall not willfully, in connection with an adjudicatory proceeding … manifest, by words or conduct, bias or prejudice based on race, color, national origin, religion, disability, age, sex, or sexual orientation towards any person involved in that proceeding in any capacity.”

There it was -- right there with the prohibition racial discrimination; a lawyer could not “manifest” any “bias or prejudice” based on “sexual orientation.” Hadn’t I done precisely that just a few years earlier? Hadn’t I done that on behalf of the United States government? And yet in that case, I hadn’t set out to prove that the female service-member was a homosexual. My task was limited to proving that she had engaged in homosexual conduct.

Then, suddenly, the issue of homosexual rights -- that is, not the right to be a homosexual -- but the right to openly engage in homosexual practices and be insulated from any push back from the rest of society -- was everywhere. Suddenly it had become a daily staple of bar journals and legal news sources.

I don’t remember when I first noticed that. Was it when California’s voters approved a referendum that “only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California”? It must have been before then. It must have been as early as 1993 when I first noticed the enormous consequences of this new so-called right. That was the year Travis County, Texas legalized “domestic partnerships,” in order to attract business investment to Austin, the state capitol.

Not until the spring of 2015, however, did the consequences of this new “right” really begin to sink in for me. That’s when I knew that people who for years had thought that the emerging collection of special protections for homosexual behavior was, “no big deal,” were flat wrong. Indiana Gov. Mike Pence had signed a “religious freedom” bill. The backlash, in the name of homosexual rights, was ferocious with the now infamous threats and boycott of a small-town pizza joint whose owners had the temerity to volunteer that they would decline to cater a homosexual marriage celebration.

So, now we know that Anita Bryant was right -- at least partly so -- when she embarked on her doomed campaign nearly 40 years ago. Ms. Bryant primarily worried about children being confronted with a dangerous alternative way of life. Today, all opponents of special homosexual rights have cause to be worried about their very survival -- legal and economic. Anyone who opposes the new Manifesto of homosexuality and gender neutrality/gender identity is at risk.

Using statutes originally and primarily (if not exclusively) designed to protect blacks from discrimination, activist homosexuals have targeted bakers, photographers, and florists, seeking to force all of them to promote a “marriage” that they believe to be immoral. One day, such laws probably will be deployed against writers of articles like this one.

In Washington State, a judge ruled that a florist violated the state’s anti-discrimination laws when she referred a longtime customer to another florist for the wedding flowers for his homosexual marriage. In New York, a husband and wife shut the doors to their business hosting weddings on their family farm, after a court fined them $13,000 for refusing to host gay marriages in their home. In Colorado, a baker faced jail time and stopped baking wedding cakes entirely, after a court ruled that he discriminated against a gay couple when he refused to bake them a cake for their wedding. In Oregon, a court found similarly against another baker, and he may be forced to pay a homosexual couple up to $150,000 as penalty. The New Mexico Supreme Court held that a photographer violated the state’s anti-discrimination statutes by refusing to photograph a gay wedding. Newspapers likely will be forced to publish homosexual wedding announcements, in violation of their existing editorial control over what they publish.

Even pro-same sex marriage, libertarian John Stossel has said that the gay marriage movement “has moved from tolerance to totalitarianism.”

To homosexual activists and their political supporters, it matters not one whit that homosexuality is not consistent with Biblical sexual morality.

In this brave, new, homosexual-friendly world, every licensed professional would be required to embrace the new orthodoxy -- to bow down to the idol of “non-discrimination,” or be cast out of his profession. I was co-counsel on an amicus brief against same-sex marriage in the Obergefell case; the Texas Attorney General also filed an amicus briefon behalf of the State of Texas against same-sex marriage. Does that put us in violation of the ethics rule previously quoted?

If the US Supreme Court forces same-sex marriage on the states, unless the states resist such a ruling, the legal system will be employed to squash resistance to the new order. Lawyers who oppose this not-so-brave new world will begin to lose their right to practice law for violation of the new so-called “ethics” of the profession. An Obama Department of Health and Human Services will push for all physicians who stand up for Christian morality to be stripped of their hospital privileges and medical licenses.

According to the advocates of homosexual marriage in the US Supreme Court, the right to a homosexual way of life is enshrined in the penumbras and emanations of the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of Equal Protection -- or is it Due Process -- or both. (Apparently, this even explains why the Civil War itself was fought.) In fact, this new right is said by these advocates to be so deeply embedded in the Constitution that it trumps the First Amendment’s guarantees of freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and freedom of association. And it empowers government to run aspects of our lives that it has no business controlling.

The same people who first claimed only to only want tolerance of their behavior will allow no toleration for other views. Will a physician be forced to perform an artificial insemination for a lesbian couple? Will a lawyer be forced to take a case defending gay marriage? Lawyers are already losing their “traditional prerogative to exercise absolute discretion in the selection of clients....” Provisions designed to advance the homosexual agenda have been incorporated into many state legal ethics codes. In California, for example, it is unethical to “discriminat[e] on the basis of ... sexual orientation [in] employment ... or [client] representation....” [State Bar of California, Rules of Professional Conduct: Rule 2-400B]. If you doubt this view of the future, read R. Beg, “License to Discriminate Revoked: How a Dentist Put Teeth In New York’s Anti-Discrimination Disciplinary Rule,” [64 Albany L. Rev. 154 (2000)].

I fear that the legal system has lost its way, and the case now before the US Supreme Court could well lay the groundwork for government to assume the sort of totalitarian powers required to force everyone to yield to what most of us hopefully still believe to be immoral.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Instead, right-thinking people can and should not be afraid to assert their God-given rights. They should not -- must not – fail in their duty to teach Biblical sexual morality to their children despite state-sponsored interference. They should accept the challenge and obey their conscience -- even if that means refusing totalitarian orders to bow down at the altar of homosexuality. We did not seek this war, but if it comes, we must not shirk from it.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: homosexualagenda; libertarians; medicalmarijuana; obamanation
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1 posted on 06/28/2015 2:26:44 AM PDT by No One Special
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To: No One Special
I think creative lawyers have to push the envelope as far as possible on this one. Push to the extreme to make the ruling absurd, or to bring about a flood of cases, arguing over each point and issue.

If the ruling causes more problems than it resolves, then the matter will have to be revisited. Hopefully that will be in a few years when the makeup of the court is different.

He court has reversed decisions in the past.

2 posted on 06/28/2015 2:32:07 AM PDT by Cowboy Bob (Isn't it funny that Socialists never want to share their own money?)
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To: Cowboy Bob

or, push the people to put an amendment in the constitution to address the issue.


3 posted on 06/28/2015 2:37:42 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Cowboy Bob

>> I think creative lawyers have to push the envelope as far as possible

I agree — break it. SCOTUS has rendered marriage meaningless.


4 posted on 06/28/2015 2:38:55 AM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

The amendment can be declared “unconstitutional.”


5 posted on 06/28/2015 2:39:20 AM PDT by Cowboy Bob (Isn't it funny that Socialists never want to share their own money?)
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To: Cowboy Bob

And pure water can be deemed not fit to drink either, but by that time the movement will have lost itself in the most basic nonsense possible.


6 posted on 06/28/2015 2:42:21 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

I think the people deserve the opportunity to see what it means to “marry anything.”


7 posted on 06/28/2015 2:43:15 AM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Furthermore, I would happily walk away from my state recognized marriage given my Christian marriage remains intact.


8 posted on 06/28/2015 2:45:42 AM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: Cowboy Bob

It’s heads I win, tails you lose.


9 posted on 06/28/2015 2:46:25 AM PDT by JohnnyP
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To: Cowboy Bob

No it can’t. However, it’s a moot point since a considerable majority of the American people presently support SSM, and that majority will grow quickly now that it’s the law.

To pass and ratify an amendment requires something like 85% support from the people. We’ll be down around 25% soon.

The only way to reverse this quickly would be to stage a coup or revolution. But a coup to impose American values is an oxymoron.

As somebody once said, “The people have decided what they want, and they deserve to get it good and hard.”


10 posted on 06/28/2015 2:46:50 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Gene Eric

Actual history has shown that the more conservative the regime, the better “gays” that managed to elude its penalties actually did in it.

The lid has come off of the evil silliness pot. One of my co-workers, a chap not even from the USA (contractor from India) put up a poster of the Joker (from Batman) in protest.


11 posted on 06/28/2015 2:47:48 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Sherman Logan

Like I said... this support is born 99% of ignorance.

The ignorance will not continue.


12 posted on 06/28/2015 2:50:04 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: No One Special

Anita Bryant was a better role model than the cow currently in the white house.


13 posted on 06/28/2015 2:52:07 AM PDT by clearcarbon
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To: Sherman Logan
The actual way to change things in America is to start with the schools. The radical left has taken over Education and indoctrinated the public.

If Cruz were to win in 2016, I hope that he puts a good conservative in as Secretary of Education. If we can have two 2-term conservatives (Cruz and Walker, for example), its possible to save the country, but it will require working from the ground up. No more teaching about homosexuality in Kindergarten, for example.

14 posted on 06/28/2015 2:57:41 AM PDT by Cowboy Bob (Isn't it funny that Socialists never want to share their own money?)
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To: Cowboy Bob

Nope.

We can’t change the schools till we change the culture.

Culture is upstream of politics. The recent ruling is the working out in the legal system of what was portrayed as normal and desirable 15 or 20 years ago in pop culture.

So if you want to know where our politics will be in 15 or 20 years, look at pop culture today.

Recent polls indicate ~60% approval among Americans for gay marriage. Presumably they will all support this ruling.

Another 10% minimum don’t know or don’t care. This means at most 30% are strongly opposed.

How exactly, in a democratic society, does 30% of the population go about imposing its values on the rest? They don’t. The only way is to get them to change their minds back.

Which is not impossible, but will be very, very difficult. Conservatives have to date not had the stomach for the long, slow grind of influencing a culture over time. We’ve preferred the “quick fixes” of laws and referenda.

That worked well, didn’t it?


15 posted on 06/28/2015 3:06:56 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: HiTech RedNeck
or, push the people to put an amendment in the constitution to address the issue.

The words of a Constitutional amendment would have no value to this SCOTUS. None.

Look what they have done with the Constitution we now have.

16 posted on 06/28/2015 3:26:23 AM PDT by P-Marlowe (Resistance to Tyrants is obedience to God!)
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To: Sherman Logan
Conservatives have to date not had the stomach for the long, slow grind of influencing a culture over time. We’ve preferred the “quick fixes” of laws and referenda.

After all, we've more important things to worry with. Like who'll win the NCAA football championship, the Super Bowl, and so forth. Bread and circuses.

17 posted on 06/28/2015 3:29:58 AM PDT by abb ("News reporting is too important to be left to the journalists." Walter Abbott (1950 -))
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To: abb

I include myself in that group, BTW.

Conservatives, more or less by definition, have lives. Their purpose in being and sense of self-worth is not totally tied up in politics and changing everything around.

Liberals, for whom the personal is political, thus have an enormous innate advantage.


18 posted on 06/28/2015 3:32:47 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan

And we usually are busy working and raising a family. But we damn sure better MAKE time to tend to the politics. Because the ENEMY ain’t gonna leave us alone. They’re mean to eliminate our way of life.


19 posted on 06/28/2015 3:36:06 AM PDT by abb ("News reporting is too important to be left to the journalists." Walter Abbott (1950 -))
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To: No One Special
if same-sex marriage arrives

"If"?

It is already here, and infecting our nation as I type this.

20 posted on 06/28/2015 3:41:35 AM PDT by SkyPilot ("I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 14:6)
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