One-handed typing: the doom of mankind!
Nov. 23rd, 2004 03:34 pmJustice Antonin Scalia, in his dissent from the ruling Lawrence v. Texas, said that the court's overturning its own opinion in Bowers v. Hardwick, "calls into question state laws against masturbation."
Remember, this isn't just Scalia spouting off here. His version of the constitution may be weird, but it's consistent in the notion that some things, such as sexuality and privacy, which aren't explicit in the constitution, are not to be dealt with by the courts but must be deferred to the states. On the other hand, religion, which is explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, is the province of the Court, which has the final say and sometimes defers to "the verdict of history." Anyone who remembers the Judge Bork case can remember his dissenting opinion in Griswold v. Connecticut.
As if that weren't bad enough, the religious right is now interested in "strengthening marriage," which include "addressing deliberate childlessness is marriage."
Isn't that special?
Remember, this isn't just Scalia spouting off here. His version of the constitution may be weird, but it's consistent in the notion that some things, such as sexuality and privacy, which aren't explicit in the constitution, are not to be dealt with by the courts but must be deferred to the states. On the other hand, religion, which is explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, is the province of the Court, which has the final say and sometimes defers to "the verdict of history." Anyone who remembers the Judge Bork case can remember his dissenting opinion in Griswold v. Connecticut.
As if that weren't bad enough, the religious right is now interested in "strengthening marriage," which include "addressing deliberate childlessness is marriage."
Isn't that special?
no subject
Date: 2004-11-24 02:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-24 04:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-24 04:48 am (UTC)Now I don't want to sound too classist or anything, but doing the most simple math, there IS a troublesome trend. The open-minded population tends to be more concerned with problems they perceive for the Earth as a whole, one of which is overpopulation and all that. They tend to make up a large percentage of the childless-by-choice couples. Much of the remainder are successful professionals as others have noted.
On the other hand, another major segment of the population has narrow-minded religious ideals, and unfortunately they tend to breed like rabbits. Take your average devout Catholic couple, based on those friends I know personally who were raised in Catholic homes, I'd predict an average of no fewer than 5 kids per couple for Catholics. Even assuming 20% of their offspring bails on the faith and gets open-minded and educated, that's still a SERIOUS exponential rate of growth. The friends I have who were raised in other Christian denominations stayed mostly at the net replacement (families with 2 kids on average), but the trend of having families with closed-minded "values" breeding at faster rates is going to have consequences that will be reflected in the general tolerance and open-mindedness of the population as a whole.
no subject
Date: 2004-11-24 07:14 am (UTC)No, I'm not Catholic.