Written between April and May 2nd, 2004 as
a High School Writing Workshop Piece
Edited on February 1st, 2016
Same-sex marriage is becoming a more
and more important and widely debated issue, and is creating controversy and
inspiring rallies across the country. Recently, the City of San Francisco,
California legalized same-sex marriage, challenging the state’s constitution,
which defines marriage as being between a man and a woman. In the first week
beginning February 12th, almost three thousand gay and lesbian
couples were wed. The city’s decision, which was opposed by Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger and Attorney General Bill Lockyer, was put into effect to
purposely question whether California and the United States would allow
same-sex marriages in the future. A proposition that was passed in California
in 2000 states that “only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or
recognized in California.” Illinois’s law states that any marriage between two
people of the same sex is considered invalid.
The proposition in California’s law –
which states that gay marriages are invalid, and denies gays a right that all
heterosexuals have – directly opposes the 14th Amendment by denying
homosexuals equal rights. According to San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, any
law against gay marriage is unconstitutional. Two states have officially
legalized gay marriage; one being Massachusetts, where judges say laws
prohibiting gays from marrying are forms of segregation that make homosexuals
and heterosexuals unequal. The other state is Vermont, where the law
technically provides for “civil unions”, but not “gay marriage”, the only basic
difference being that in marriage, the couple receives a marriage license.
The 14th Amendment to the
United States Constitution, ratified after slavery was abolished, states “no
state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the United States.” This clearly includes any
homosexual who is a legal citizen of the United States. In a literal
interpretation of this amendment, marriage is a privilege to which every U.S.
citizen is entitled. Therefore it is illegal to deny the right to marry to any
citizen. However, the unconstitutional proposition passed in California, as
well as 37 other states, still stands. Some people who oppose gay marriage,
including President George W. Bush, say that it will require a new
constitutional amendment to allow gays to marry. To do so would require
approval from 67 senators, approximately 300 representatives (depending on when
the law would be passed), and the legislatures of 38 states. If it were to be
formally proposed and passed, all previous state laws forbidding same-sex
marriage would be invalid.
Prior to the date when Vermont
became the first state to legalize homosexual civil unions, the law’s treatment
of gays had been similar to the treatment of blacks between the abolition of
slavery and the civil rights movement one hundred years later. State laws
segregated African-Americans and whites, forcing them to be apart from each
other in public settings at all times. Many Southern states had laws that
forbade whites from marrying any person who was less than 7/8 white, but
non-whites, then categorized as “coloreds”, could marry those of their own
race. These laws, which were called segregation laws or “Jim Crow” laws, also
required blacks and whites to have separate bathroom facilities, separate
buildings to buy alcohol, and separate movie theaters. Under these laws, blacks
and whites were considered “separate but equal”, and therefore the laws were
not considered unconstitutional.
Today, many Christian groups are
against any efforts to pass laws legalizing gay marriage. Some are seeking the
White House’s support in opposing any propositions that “redefine” marriage.
According to them, marriage between two men or two women, and any homosexual
acts, are immoral. Some, like Kenneth Howell, the director of the Newman
Institute of Catholic Thought, oppose gay marriage because he thinks laws
should reflect morals. The Catholic Church does not condone it because
homosexual marriage serves no purpose; specifically, to create children. Some
say that allowing either civil unions, marriages, or domestic partnerships – which
allow gays, and also heterosexual couples whom do not want to marry, to have
benefits such as jail and hospital visitation and funeral arrangements, but not
the right to be recognized as “married” – would undermine the religious values
of Christians and Jews.
If the proposed constitutional
amendment to ban gay marriage (Note: there are alternative legal options that
could also be effective in prohibiting this across the country; an amendment is
not necessary the only way to do it) were to be officially proposed, voted on,
and passed, then it would be the first amendment in United States history to
take rights away from people. If any state were to legalize gay marriage before
the amendment, married gay couples would have to be broken up by law, and they
would no longer be able to visit each other in hospitals or have power of attorney
over them and the ability to decide what happens to them when they die. Homosexuals,
a significant percent of the population, would have one of the most important
freedoms taken away from them; the freedom to love, and the freedom to be
considered a married couple by the law.
Although in Illinois, marriage
between two people of the same sex, performed in other states, is invalid,
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley has expressed support for the possibility of
Cook County legalizing gay marriage, along with the mayors of Minneapolis,
Minnesota, and Salt Lake City, Utah, as well as Gifford Miller, the Speaker of
the New York City Council. SO far, the same number of states that would have to
approve any constitutional amendment allowing gay marriages, has already passed
laws against them. Still, with the
changes made in the last few years advancing gay rights, such as San Francisco’s
and Massachusetts’s gay marriage laws, Vermont’s civil unions law, and Cook
County, Illinois and New York City’s domestic partnerships laws, the
possibility remains that homosexuals will soon be entitled to get married and
have the same rights as heterosexuals, and with the help of voters making the
decision in favor of love and freedom, it could become a reality soon.
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