1.31.2008

2008 General Assembly Series: SJR7 and the Waste of Tax Dollars

Anyone that has read my post from last February regarding SJR7, the so-called "Indiana Gay Marriage Ban", knows how I feel about the bill. I think it is a broad overreaching of the state government into the private lives of individuals and an attempt to codify bigotry in our most important document. Those opposed to the thought of same-sex marriage can be comfortable that Indiana law still prevents the marriage or civil union of two persons of the same gender. A constitutional amendment is just one more way to ensure that future generations can't become less bigoted than the current one.

I applauded last year when the bill died in the House. But the bill has again passed the Senate, with a vote of 39-9 (practically the same as last year). The bill is stalled in the House, and it looks ready to die at the hands of House Democrats again. That is, unless Rep. Eric Turner (R-Marion) has his way, and manages to have it attached to the same bill capping property taxes. That just shows the shady dealings that go on in politics: attaching a frivolous and hateful bill to one for which the people are desperately crying out.

The arguments for this ban are same arguments we heard for decades regarding interracial marriage. Anti-miscegenation laws were in place since the beginnings of this nation, often appearing in state Constitutions. Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967), was the final nail in the coffin of those racist laws. There, the Supreme Court reversed a trial judge's decision that a black woman and white man could not enter the state without being subject to arrest. The trial judge showed his true colors when he stated, "Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, and red, and he placed them on separate continents. And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mix." Id. at 3. In other words, interracial marriage was "unnatural." This argument sounds familiar.

It took 103 years, but South Carolina finally removed the prohibition on "marriage of a white person with a Negro or mulatto or a person who shall have one-eighth or more of Negro blood" from its Constitution in 1998. How sad that such bigotry was written into a Constitution for so long. It casts a shadow of shame on the people of the state. Now Indiana wants to do the same.

If the state wants to ban gay marriage in statutes, and that is the will of the people, so be it. Not all of us may agree, but such is the way of politics and legislation. As I stated in my previous post, amending the Constitution really is not something we should do lightly. And besides, haven't we got more important bill to pass right now?

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